Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nicolas Lebacq
c9cc4324d3 NextAction refactoring to eliminate sentinel arrays and pointers (#1923)
<!--
> [!WARNING]
> **This is a DRAFT PR.**
> The structure is not definitive. The code might not be optimised yet.
It might not even start nor compile yet.
> **Don't panic.  It's going to be ok. 👌 We can make modifications, we
can fix things.** 😁
-->
# Description

This PR aims to refactor the NextAction declaration to achieve two
goals:

## Eliminate C-style sentinel arrays

Currently, a double pointer (`NextAction**`) approach is being used.
This an old pre-C++11 (< 2011) trick before `std::vector<>` became a
thing.
This approach is painful for developers because they constantly need to
declare their `NextAction` arrays as:
```cpp
NextAction::array(0, new NextAction("foo", 1.0f), nullptr)
```
Instead of:
```cpp
{ new NextAction("foo", 1.0f) }
```
The first argument of `NextAction::array` is actually a hack. It is used
to have a named argument so `va_args` can find the remaining arguments.
It is set to 0 everywhere but in fact does nothing. This is very
confusing to people unfamiliar with this antiquated syntax.
The last argument `nullptr` is what we call a sentinel. It's a `nullptr`
because `va_args` is looking for a `nullptr` to stop iterating. It's
also a hack and also leads to confusion.

## Eliminate unnecessary pointers for `NextAction`

Pointers can be used for several reasons, to cite a few:
- Indicate strong, absolute identity.
- Provide strong but transferable ownership (unlike references).
- When a null value is acceptable (`nullptr`).
- When copy is expensive.

`NextAction` meets none of these criteria:
- It has no identity because it is purely behavioural.
- It is never owned by anything as it is passed around and never fetched
from a registry.
- The only situations where it can be `nullptr` are errors that should
in fact throw an `std::invalid_argument` instead.
- They are extremely small objects that embark a single `std::string`
and a single `float`.

Pointers should be avoided when not strictly necessary because they can
quickly lead to undefined behaviour due to unhandled `nullptr`
situations. They also make the syntax heavier due to the necessity to
constantly check for `nullptr`. Finally, they aren't even good for
performance in that situation because shifting a pointer so many times
is likely more expensive than copying such a trivial object.

# End goal

The end goal is to declare `NextAction` arrays this way:
```cpp
{ NextAction("foo", 1.0f) }
```

> [!NOTE]
> Additional note: `NextAction` is nothing but a hacky proxy to an
`Action` constructor. This should eventually be reworked to use handles
instead of strings. This would make copying `NextAction` even cheaper
and remove the need for the extremely heavy stringly typed current
approach. Stringly typed entities are a known anti-pattern so we need to
move on from those.
2026-01-06 12:37:39 +01:00
kadeshar
85c7009fe1 Codestyle fix (#1797)
Warning:
Dont change this PR as draft to make it testable


DONT REVIEW UNTIL Codestyle C++ workflow dont pass
2025-11-05 21:10:17 +01:00
Revision
fcb956ec1b Removed unnecessary spaces 2025-09-19 22:43:50 +02:00
Bobblybook
b59c87871f Indentation and misc cleanup 2024-10-01 18:27:06 +10:00
Bobblybook
b91c56a8a5 Wotlk dungeon structure & Utgarde Keep 2024-09-30 23:38:39 +10:00