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We need a named constant for 9223372036854775808 #79
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9223372036854775807 is NSNotFound, a constant that Apple’s APIs are frequently using to indicate that there is no normal value (since in Objective-C ints, points, etc. cannot be |
Thanks, that’s interesting. This means:
That’s not satisfying, is it? |
Where are you getting 9223372036854775808? |
Now, that’s confusing. It took me a while to solve that puzzle: • Can’t be? Yes, it can. The reason is – as far as I figured out – that To me, this shows how hacky and fragile the current solution is. I feel uncomfortable working like this. |
The workaround is to check whether a value is equal to or less than |
Comparing floats is always a bit tricky. That's why I picked a (random) big (but smaller than NSNotFound) number as a threshold in the python code. As far as I understand, kerning values are stored as Int16, so the max value is 0x7FFF. So any value between that and NSNotFound is fine as threshold. |
Thanks for the explanations. I wouldn’t say comparing floats is always tricky, though. It would have been easy to define a large integer value (one that can be represented by a 32-bit float) as a named constant, let’s say NO_KERNING_VALUE or UNSPECIFIED_VALUE, then all code could safely check for equality instead of using a random threshold. This would make the code robust and readable. |
It might be better wrap the relevant methods so that they return But we can add a constant like |
It seems Glyph internally uses
9223372036854775808
, orLLONG_MAX
as ObjC calls it, in certain scenarios to indicate “no value” or similar. I believe it would be much cleaner to have a named constant for this, and proper documentation.For example, in my ObjC code, I am checking the return value of
kerningForFontMasterID:LeftKey:RightKey:direction:
againstLLONG_MAX
to determine whether a kerning pair exists. This has always felt like a dirty hack as it is undocumented and doesn’t use a clearly named constant. The Python wrapper simply usesif value > 1000000:
. That’s even worse IMHO, as if the value came from an unreliable external source, and needs a sanity check.The unit tests check some values against
9223372036854775807
(that’s a 7 at the end, i.e.LLONG_MAX-1
). Why is this? What is the meaning?Can I kindly ask to solve this in a cleaner, less hacky way by simply providing a named constant (in ObjC as well as Python). Thanks! – Tim
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