Magic Enum C++
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Magic Enum C++ | shaders | |
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44 | 9 | |
4,403 | 472 | |
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8.1 | 1.8 | |
12 days ago | about 2 years ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
MIT License | - |
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Magic Enum C++
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What C++ library do you wish existed but hasn’t been created yet?
I'm not sure this is quite what you're asking for, but this library has been super helpful to me in the past : https://github.com/Neargye/magic_enum
- Usable Magic Enums for C++
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Fully Permissive License C++ Logger For Embedded System
Also, a shoutout to Magic Enum: https://github.com/Neargye/magic_enum
- Favorite Ways of Stringifying Enums
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enum_name (yet another enum to/from string conversion utility >=C++11)
What does this have to offer over magic_enum?
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quill v2.7.0 released - Asynchronous Low Latency C++ Logging Library
But it's a hack, and I prefer not to use hacks in production, because of their significant limitations:
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Enums print numbers instead of words
You can either write a to string(view) function for your enum or use https://github.com/Neargye/magic_enum
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Enums with methods
Why reinvent the wheel? magic_enum
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Error: Boost bimap can't convert const CompatibleKey to Key&
Also if you want to convert enum members to string representation I suggest you just use magic_enum instead, much smaller dependency.
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Macro to write enum and converter from and to string
Magic Enum provides that.
shaders
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Adding HLSL and DirectX Support to Clang and LLVM
It may be close to a technical impossibility, but the Circle compiler by Sean Baxter is attempting it. That's based on an aggressive "de-pointerization" (see [1] in particular for details). There's also academic work[2] to compile C++ to shaders. I agree that it's an open question how well that will work out.
Also as pointed out elsethread, now that buffer device address is starting to land, the friction to compile pointer-intense C++ code should decrease even more. These are exciting times!
[1]: https://github.com/seanbaxter/shaders#approaching-circle-sha...
[2]: https://arxiv.org/abs/2109.14682
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Writing Vulkan SPIR-V shaders in C++?
You can use circle c++ shader https://github.com/seanbaxter/shaders but it's limited to look linux afaik?
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Where to Learn Vulkan for parallel computation (with references to porting from CUDA)
First we have Circle C++ shaders, which pretty much would tick all the boxes. Problem is it's closed source and only compiles host code on linux. Closed source isn't the biggest of issues actually, but prevents anyone from fixing the developers issue with interfacing with the windows ABI and getting the thing working on windows (which itself isn't something they are able to fix because windows doesn't provide the documentation to work with their ABI). However you could use it separately to compile your SPIR-V for windows since SPIR-V doesn't care about platform itself.
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Has anyone seriously considered C++AMP? Thoughts / Experiences?
Yes, Vulkan GPU source is split, though technically in a way that makes it more similar to CUDA. Vulkan uses an intermediate format instead of consuming text code directly, meaning new features are easier to add and frontend code doesn't need to be passed to the vendors driver compiler. SPIR-V is like DXIL or PTX code for CUDA, basically LLVM IR for GPUs. The CUDA compiler compiles your device code into PTX code, and it's what enables you to have "non split" source code. There's even an option to have separate PTX code in CUDA. There are few projects that aim to bring Vulkan SPIR-V into source, including Rust GPU for rust (though it will still have to be in a separate file) and Circle C++ shader for C++.
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Circle, the C++ Automation Language
My favorite use is putting user-defined attributes on data members, and using reflection to generate a UI to manipulate those values. I do it with these shadertoys:
https://github.com/seanbaxter/shaders#reflection-and-attribu...
Just mark your declarations up with custom attributes:
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Unified Shader Programming in C++
I'm confused what is novel about this paper. We already have unified shader programming with circle C++, with way more features, and instead of having an SPIR-V compiler, they made a source to source compiler... We have quite a few of those.
I think shader specialisation is handled pretty well in circle. Since you can essentially run arbitrary C++ code at compile time, selection and specialisation of a shader can even depend on hardware specific benchmarks. There is an extensive repo with examples here: https://github.com/seanbaxter/shaders. One example decodes a sprite sheet stored as a png at compile time and creates a specialised compute shader for it. You can also easily implement a control UI based on reflection of uniform shader parameters.
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Embark Studios has rewritten all their renderer's shader code from GLSL to Rust
There's a project doing something similar for C++ called Circle which is pretty incredible. In its core Circle is an extension of standard C++ which adds a ton of metaprogramming facilities and other productivity enhancing features, things the base language sorely lacks like full compile-time execution of regular C++ code which lets you do anything you can normally do from runtime during compile-time (including file I/O and networking), reflection, typed enums, pattern matching, hygienic macros, list comprehensions and language-native ranges, first class paramater packs and much more.
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Code generation using attributes
I use them to automatically generate an ImGui interface for controlling a shadertoy here: https://github.com/seanbaxter/shaders/blob/master/README.md#user-attributes-and-dear-imgui
What are some alternatives?
Nameof C++ - Nameof operator for modern C++, simply obtain the name of a variable, type, function, macro, and enum
rust-gpu - 🐉 Making Rust a first-class language and ecosystem for GPU shaders 🚧
Protobuf - Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
meta
cereal - A C++11 library for serialization
bgfx - Cross-platform, graphics API agnostic, "Bring Your Own Engine/Framework" style rendering library.
Boost.Serialization - Boost.org serialization module
circle - The compiler is available for download. Get it!
FlatBuffers - FlatBuffers: Memory Efficient Serialization Library
magnum - Lightweight and modular C++11 graphics middleware for games and data visualization
pfr - std::tuple like methods for user defined types without any macro or boilerplate code
processing - Source code for the Processing Core and Development Environment (PDE)