Mercurial > ~dholland > hg > ag > index.cgi
view anagram/agcore/mrule.h @ 6:607e3be6bad8
Adjust to the moving target called the C++ standard.
Apparently nowadays it's not allowed to define an explicit copy
constructor but not an assignment operator. Consequently, defining the
explicit copy constructor in terms of the implicit/automatic
assignment operator for general convenience no longer works.
Add assignment operators.
Caution: not tested with the IBM compiler, but there's no particular
reason it shouldn't work.
author | David A. Holland |
---|---|
date | Mon, 30 May 2022 23:46:22 -0400 |
parents | 13d2b8934445 |
children |
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/* * AnaGram, A System for Syntax Directed Programming * Copyright 1993-2002 Parsifal Software. All Rights Reserved. * See the file COPYING for license and usage terms. * * mrule.h - marked rules */ #ifndef MRULE_H #define MRULE_H #include "rule.h" class MarkedRule { public: Rule rule; int index; MarkedRule() : rule(0), index(0) {} MarkedRule(const Rule &r, int x) : rule(r), index(x) {} MarkedRule(const Rule &r) : rule(r), index(r->length()) {} int operator < (const MarkedRule &r) const { if ((int) rule < (int) r.rule) return 1; if ((int) r.rule < (int) rule) return 0; return index < r.index; } Token leftToken() { return rule.token(index - 1); } Token rightToken() { return rule.token(index); } int positionLeft() { return index == 0; } int positionRight() { return (unsigned) index == rule->length(); } MarkedRule nextLeft() { return MarkedRule(rule, index - 1); } MarkedRule nextRight() { return MarkedRule(rule, index + 1); } }; #endif /* MRULE_H */