CGAL 5.5.5 - Manual
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The chapter explains some basic features of CGAL such as thread safety, code deprecation, checking of pre- and postconditions and altering the failure behavior, and how to control inlining.
These concepts are further developed in the Developer Manual.
All names introduced by CGAL, especially those documented in these manuals, are in a namespace called CGAL
, which is in global scope. A user can either qualify names from CGAL by adding CGAL::
, e.g., CGAL::Point_2< CGAL::Exact_predicates_inexact_constructions_kernel >
, make a single name from CGAL visible in a scope via a using
statement, e.g., using CGAL::Point_2;
, and then use this name unqualified in this scope, or even make all names from namespace CGAL
visible in a scope with using namespace CGAL;
. The latter, however, is likely to give raise to name conflicts and is therefore not recommended.
CGAL is progressively being made thread-safe. The guidelines which are followed are:
If the macro CGAL_HAS_THREADS
is not defined, then CGAL assumes it can use any thread-unsafe code (such as static variables). By default, this macro is not defined, unless BOOST_HAS_THREADS
or _OPENMP
is defined. It is possible to force its definition in the compiler options, and it is possible to prevent its default definition by defining the macro CGAL_HAS_NO_THREADS
. If you are using CMake, then you can set the CMake option CGAL_HAS_NO_THREADS
to TRUE
. In addition to defining the preprocessor macro CGAL_HAS_NO_THREADS`, it will also avoid CMake to link with the native threads support library on your system.
After being based on the C++ standard released in 1998 (and later refined in 2003) for a long time, CGAL is now based on a newer major version of the standard, C++14.
Much of the CGAL code contains assert statements for preconditions, and postconditions of functions as well as in the code. These assertions can be switched on and off per package and the user can change the error behaviour. For details see Section Checks of Chapter Chapter_STL_Extensions_for_CGAL.
Making functions inlined can, at times, improve the efficiency of your code. However this is not always the case and it can differ for a single function depending on the application in which it is used. Thus CGAL defines a set of compile-time macros that can be used to control whether certain functions are designated as inlined functions or not. The following table lists the macros and their default values, which are set in one of the CGAL include files.
Macro Name | Default |
---|---|
CGAL_KERNEL_INLINE | inline |
CGAL_KERNEL_MEDIUM_INLINE | |
CGAL_KERNEL_LARGE_INLINE | |
CGAL_MEDIUM_INLINE | inline |
CGAL_LARGE_INLINE | |
CGAL_HUGE_INLINE |
If you wish to change the value of one or more of these macros, you can simply give it a new value when compiling. For example, to make functions that use the macro CGAL_KERNEL_MEDIUM_INLINE
inline functions, you should set the value of this macro to inline
instead of the default blank.
Note that setting inline manually is very fragile, especially in a template context. It is usually better to let the compiler select by himself which functions should be inlined or not.
Every release of CGAL defines the following preprocessor macros:
CGAL_VERSION_STR
CGAL_VERSION_NR
a numerical description of the current release such that more recent releases have higher number.
More precisely, it is defined as 1MMmmbiiii
, where MM
is the major release number (e.g. 03), mm
is the minor release number (e.g. 02), b
is the bug-fix release number (e.g. 0), and iiii
is the internal release number (e.g. 0001). For public releases, the latter is defined as 1000. Examples: for the public release 3.2.4 this number is 1030241000; for internal release 3.2-I-1, it is 1030200001. Note that this scheme was modified around 3.2-I-30.
CGAL_VERSION_NUMBER(M,m,b)
CGAL_VERSION_NUMBER(3,2,4)
is equal to 1030241000. The macro CGAL_VERSION
is deprecated. It is the same as CGAL_VERSION_STR
, but not as a string literal.