`AK::String` can now be reversed via AK::String::reverse(). This makes
life a lot easier for functions like `itoa()`, where the output
ends up being backwards. Very much not like the normal STL
(which requires an `std::reverse` object) way of doing things.
A call to reverse returns a new `AK::String` so as to not upset any
of the possible references to the same `StringImpl` shared between
Strings.
This was a workaround to be able to build on case-insensitive file
systems where it might get confused about <string.h> vs <String.h>.
Let's just not support building that way, so String.h can have an
objectively nicer name. :^)
Utf8View wraps a StringView and implements begin() and end() that
return a Utf8CodepointIterator, which parses UTF-8-encoded Unicode
codepoints and returns them as 32-bit integers.
This is the first step towards supporting emojis in Serenity ^)
https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/issues/490
Add the concept of a PeekType to Traits<T>. This is the type we'll
return (wrapped in an Optional) from HashMap::get().
The PeekType for OwnPtr<T> and NonnullOwnPtr<T> is const T*,
which means that HashMap::get() will return an Optional<const T*> for
maps-of-those.
Okay, so, OwnPtr<T>::release_nonnull() returns a NonnullOwnPtr<T>.
It assumes that the OwnPtr is non-null to begin with.
Note that this removes the value from the OwnPtr, as there can only be
a single owner.
I was able to get parsing time down to about 1/3 of the original time
by using callgrind+kcachegrind. There's definitely more improvements
that can be made here, but I'm gonna be happy with this for now. :^)
Instead of aborting the program when we hit an assertion, just print a
message and keep going.
This allows us to write tests that provoke assertions on purpose.
There was a bug in the "prepend_vector_object" test but it was masked
by us not printing failures. (The bug was that we were adding three
elements to the "objects" vector and then checking that another
vector called "more_objects" indeed had three elements. Oops!)
Restructure the makefile a little so it only builds objects once, and
then run them on make clean.
This is a little slower (since we're relinking tests each makeall), but
it also ensures that it will work.
This allows you to do things like:
vector.insert_before_matching(value, [](auto& entry) {
return value < entry;
});
Basically it scans until it finds an element that matches the condition
callback and then inserts the new value before the matching element.
Instead of manually doing String::format("%d"/"%u") everywhere, let's have
a String API for this. It's just a wrapper around format() for now, but it
could be made more efficient in the future.
Get rid of the ConstIterator classes for these containers and use templated
FooIterator<T, ...> and FooIterator<const T, ...> helpers.
This makes the HashTable class a lot easier to read.
The underlying data structure is a singly-linked list of Vector<T>.
We never shift any of the vector contents around, but we batch the memory
allocations into 1000-element segments.