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| author | Alex Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com> | 2025-07-14 16:12:55 +0100 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Alex Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com> | 2025-07-14 16:20:33 +0100 |
| commit | d045eb7a4af758e3483e5e8fd9bdbe725095fdec (patch) | |
| tree | c2152dcc517ab6555cd215430b28801eb30fee01 /src/codegen | |
| parent | f43f89a70588c2add2a7c84d12eef2852d215f51 (diff) | |
| download | zig-d045eb7a4af758e3483e5e8fd9bdbe725095fdec.tar.gz zig-d045eb7a4af758e3483e5e8fd9bdbe725095fdec.zip | |
langref: make example more interesting.
As written, I think langref's example is actually a poor reason to use
`inline`.
If you have
if (foo(1200, 34) != 1234) {
@compileError("bad");
}
and you want to make sure that the call is executed at compile time, the
right way to fix it is to add comptime
if (comptime foo(1200, 34) != 1234) {
@compileError("bad");
}
and not to make the function `inline`. I _think_ that inlining functions
just to avoid `comptime` at a call-site is an anti-pattern. When the
reader sees `foo(123)` at the call-site, they _expect_ this to be a
runtime call, as that's the normal rule in Zig.
Inline is still necessary when you can't make the _whole_ call
`comptime`, because it has some runtime effects, but you still want
comptime-known result.
A good example here is
inline fn findImportPkgHashOrFatal(b: *Build, comptime asking_build_zig: type, comptime dep_name: []const u8) []const u8 {
from Build.zig, where the `b` argument is runtime, and is used for
side-effects, but where the result is comptime.
I don't know of a good small example to demonstrate the subtelty here,
so I went ahead with just adding a runtime print to `foo`. Hopefully
it'll be enough for motivated reader to appreciate the subtelty!
Diffstat (limited to 'src/codegen')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions
