// This file is part of Eigen, a lightweight C++ template library // for linear algebra. // // Copyright (C) 2008-2009 Gael Guennebaud // Copyright (C) 2006-2008 Benoit Jacob // // Eigen is free software; you can redistribute it and/or // modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public // License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either // version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. // // Alternatively, you can redistribute it and/or // modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as // published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of // the License, or (at your option) any later version. // // Eigen is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY // WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS // FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License or the // GNU General Public License for more details. // // You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public // License and a copy of the GNU General Public License along with // Eigen. If not, see . #ifndef EIGEN_CONSTANTS_H #define EIGEN_CONSTANTS_H /** This value means that a quantity is not known at compile-time, and that instead the value is * stored in some runtime variable. * * Explanation for the choice of this value: * - It should be positive and larger than the number of entries in any reasonable fixed-size matrix. * This allows to simplify many compile-time conditions throughout Eigen. * - It should be smaller than the sqrt of INT_MAX. Indeed, we often multiply a number of rows with a number * of columns in order to compute a number of coefficients. Even if we guard that with an "if" checking whether * the values are Dynamic, we still get a compiler warning "integer overflow". So the only way to get around * it would be a meta-selector. Doing this everywhere would reduce code readability and lenghten compilation times. * Also, disabling compiler warnings for integer overflow, sounds like a bad idea. * - It should be a prime number, because for example the old value 10000 led to bugs with 100x100 matrices. * * If you wish to port Eigen to a platform where sizeof(int)==2, it is perfectly possible to set Dynamic to, say, 97. * However, changing the value of Dynamic breaks the ABI, as Dynamic is often used as a template parameter for Matrix. */ const int Dynamic = 33331; /** This value means +Infinity; it is currently used only as the p parameter to MatrixBase::lpNorm(). * The value Infinity there means the L-infinity norm. */ const int Infinity = -1; /** \defgroup flags flags * \ingroup Core_Module * * These are the possible bits which can be OR'ed to constitute the flags of a matrix or * expression. * * It is important to note that these flags are a purely compile-time notion. They are a compile-time property of * an expression type, implemented as enum's. They are not stored in memory at runtime, and they do not incur any * runtime overhead. * * \sa MatrixBase::Flags */ /** \ingroup flags * * for a matrix, this means that the storage order is row-major. * If this bit is not set, the storage order is column-major. * For an expression, this determines the storage order of * the matrix created by evaluation of that expression. */ const unsigned int RowMajorBit = 0x1; /** \ingroup flags * * means the expression should be evaluated by the calling expression */ const unsigned int EvalBeforeNestingBit = 0x2; /** \ingroup flags * * means the expression should be evaluated before any assignement */ const unsigned int EvalBeforeAssigningBit = 0x4; /** \ingroup flags * * Short version: means the expression might be vectorized * * Long version: means that the coefficients can be handled by packets * and start at a memory location whose alignment meets the requirements * of the present CPU architecture for optimized packet access. In the fixed-size * case, there is the additional condition that the total size of the coefficients * array is a multiple of the packet size, so that it is possible to access all the * coefficients by packets. In the dynamic-size case, there is no such condition * on the total size, so it might not be possible to access the few last coeffs * by packets. * * \note This bit can be set regardless of whether vectorization is actually enabled. * To check for actual vectorizability, see \a ActualPacketAccessBit. */ const unsigned int PacketAccessBit = 0x8; #ifdef EIGEN_VECTORIZE /** \ingroup flags * * If vectorization is enabled (EIGEN_VECTORIZE is defined) this constant * is set to the value \a PacketAccessBit. * * If vectorization is not enabled (EIGEN_VECTORIZE is not defined) this constant * is set to the value 0. */ const unsigned int ActualPacketAccessBit = PacketAccessBit; #else const unsigned int ActualPacketAccessBit = 0x0; #endif /** \ingroup flags * * Short version: means the expression can be seen as 1D vector. * * Long version: means that one can access the coefficients * of this expression by coeff(int), and coeffRef(int) in the case of a lvalue expression. These * index-based access methods are guaranteed * to not have to do any runtime computation of a (row, col)-pair from the index, so that it * is guaranteed that whenever it is available, index-based access is at least as fast as * (row,col)-based access. Expressions for which that isn't possible don't have the LinearAccessBit. * * If both PacketAccessBit and LinearAccessBit are set, then the * packets of this expression can be accessed by packet(int), and writePacket(int) in the case of a * lvalue expression. * * Typically, all vector expressions have the LinearAccessBit, but there is one exception: * Product expressions don't have it, because it would be troublesome for vectorization, even when the * Product is a vector expression. Thus, vector Product expressions allow index-based coefficient access but * not index-based packet access, so they don't have the LinearAccessBit. */ const unsigned int LinearAccessBit = 0x10; /** \ingroup flags * * Means that the underlying array of coefficients can be directly accessed. This means two things. * First, references to the coefficients must be available through coeffRef(int, int). This rules out read-only * expressions whose coefficients are computed on demand by coeff(int, int). Second, the memory layout of the * array of coefficients must be exactly the natural one suggested by rows(), cols(), stride(), and the RowMajorBit. * This rules out expressions such as Diagonal, whose coefficients, though referencable, do not have * such a regular memory layout. */ const unsigned int DirectAccessBit = 0x20; /** \ingroup flags * * means the first coefficient packet is guaranteed to be aligned */ const unsigned int AlignedBit = 0x40; /** \ingroup flags * * means all diagonal coefficients are equal to 0 */ const unsigned int ZeroDiagBit = 0x80; /** \ingroup flags * * means all diagonal coefficients are equal to 1 */ const unsigned int UnitDiagBit = 0x100; /** \ingroup flags * * means the matrix is selfadjoint (M=M*). */ const unsigned int SelfAdjointBit = 0x200; /** \ingroup flags * * means the strictly lower triangular part is 0 */ const unsigned int UpperTriangularBit = 0x400; /** \ingroup flags * * means the strictly upper triangular part is 0 */ const unsigned int LowerTriangularBit = 0x800; /** \ingroup flags * * means the expression includes sparse matrices and the sparse path has to be taken. */ const unsigned int SparseBit = 0x1000; // list of flags that are inherited by default const unsigned int HereditaryBits = RowMajorBit | EvalBeforeNestingBit | EvalBeforeAssigningBit | SparseBit; // Possible values for the Mode parameter of part() const unsigned int UpperTriangular = UpperTriangularBit; const unsigned int StrictlyUpperTriangular = UpperTriangularBit | ZeroDiagBit; const unsigned int LowerTriangular = LowerTriangularBit; const unsigned int StrictlyLowerTriangular = LowerTriangularBit | ZeroDiagBit; const unsigned int SelfAdjoint = SelfAdjointBit; const unsigned int UnitUpperTriangular = UpperTriangularBit | UnitDiagBit; const unsigned int UnitLowerTriangular = LowerTriangularBit | UnitDiagBit; enum { DiagonalOnTheLeft, DiagonalOnTheRight }; enum { Aligned, Unaligned }; enum { ForceAligned, AsRequested }; enum { ConditionalJumpCost = 5 }; enum CornerType { TopLeft, TopRight, BottomLeft, BottomRight }; enum DirectionType { Vertical, Horizontal, BothDirections }; enum ProductEvaluationMode { NormalProduct, CacheFriendlyProduct, SparseTimeSparseProduct, SparseTimeDenseProduct, DenseTimeSparseProduct }; enum { /** \internal Equivalent to a slice vectorization for fixed-size matrices having good alignment * and good size */ InnerVectorization, /** \internal Vectorization path using a single loop plus scalar loops for the * unaligned boundaries */ LinearVectorization, /** \internal Generic vectorization path using one vectorized loop per row/column with some * scalar loops to handle the unaligned boundaries */ SliceVectorization, NoVectorization }; enum { NoUnrolling, InnerUnrolling, CompleteUnrolling }; enum { ColMajor = 0, RowMajor = 0x1, // it is only a coincidence that this is equal to RowMajorBit -- don't rely on that /** \internal Align the matrix itself if it is vectorizable fixed-size */ AutoAlign = 0, /** \internal Don't require alignment for the matrix itself (the array of coefficients, if dynamically allocated, may still be requested to be aligned) */ DontAlign = 0x2 }; /* the following could as well be written: * enum NoChange_t { NoChange }; * but it feels dangerous to disambiguate overloaded functions on enum/integer types. * If on some platform it is really impossible to get rid of "unused variable" warnings, then * we can always come back to that solution. */ struct NoChange_t {}; namespace { EIGEN_UNUSED NoChange_t NoChange; } enum { IsDense = 0, IsSparse = SparseBit, NoDirectAccess = 0, HasDirectAccess = DirectAccessBit }; enum TransformTraits { Isometry = 0x1, Affine = 0x2, AffineCompact = 0x10 | Affine, Projective = 0x20 }; const int EiArch_Generic = 0x0; const int EiArch_SSE = 0x1; const int EiArch_AltiVec = 0x2; #if defined EIGEN_VECTORIZE_SSE const int EiArch = EiArch_SSE; #elif defined EIGEN_VECTORIZE_ALTIVEC const int EiArch = EiArch_AltiVec; #else const int EiArch = EiArch_Generic; #endif #endif // EIGEN_CONSTANTS_H