skia2/include/core/SkTScopedPtr.h
vandebo@chromium.org 2a22e10ab2 Add Truetype and Type 1 font embedding support
Sorry this is such a large CL.  It was very exploratory for me to make this
work.

- Add an interface to SkFontHost to retrieve font information and provide NULL implementations on all platforms except Linux.
- Segment large Type 1 fonts into fonts with shared resources with 255 glyphs each.
- Convert the various Type 1 formats to the form PDF wants.
- Update font as we draw text instead of as part of the graphical state.
- Remove built-in font support, we can't really use it.

Other changes I can pull out to a separate CL if you like.

- Add SkTScopedPtr class.
- Fix double free of resources.
- Fix bug in resource unique-ifying code.
- Don't print anything for any empty clip path.
- Fix copy paste error - MiterLimit.
- Fix sign extension bug in SkPDFString
- Fix FlateTest rename that was missed on a previous commit.

Review URL: http://codereview.appspot.com/4082042

git-svn-id: http://skia.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@728 2bbb7eff-a529-9590-31e7-b0007b416f81
2011-01-25 21:01:34 +00:00

84 lines
2.6 KiB
C++

/*
* Copyright (C) 2011 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
#ifndef SkTScopedPtr_DEFINED
#define SkTScopedPtr_DEFINED
#include "SkTypes.h"
/** \class SkTScopedPtr
A SkTScopedPtr<T> is like a T*, except that the destructor of SkTScopedPtr<T>
automatically deletes the pointer it holds (if any). That is, SkTScopedPtr<T>
owns the T object that it points to. Like a T*, a SkTScopedPtr<T> may hold
either NULL or a pointer to a T object. Also like T*, SkTScopedPtr<T> is
thread-compatible, and once you dereference it, you get the threadsafety
guarantees of T.
The size of a SkTScopedPtr is small: sizeof(SkTScopedPtr<T>) == sizeof(T*)
*/
template <typename T> class SkTScopedPtr : SkNoncopyable {
public:
explicit SkTScopedPtr(T* o = NULL) : fObj(o) {}
~SkTScopedPtr() {
enum { kTypeMustBeComplete = sizeof(T) };
delete fObj;
}
/** Delete the current object, if any. Then take ownership of the
passed object.
*/
void reset(T* o = NULL) {
if (o != fObj) {
enum { kTypeMustBeComplete = sizeof(T) };
delete fObj;
fObj = o;
}
}
/** Without deleting the current object, return it and forget about it.
Similar to calling get() and reset(), but the object is not deleted.
*/
T* release() {
T* retVal = fObj;
fObj = NULL;
return retVal;
}
T& operator*() const {
SkASSERT(fObj != NULL);
return *fObj;
}
T* operator->() const {
SkASSERT(fObj != NULL);
return fObj;
}
T* get() const { return fObj; }
bool operator==(T* o) const { return fObj == o; }
bool operator!=(T* o) const { return fObj != o; }
private:
T* fObj;
// Forbid comparison of SkTScopedPtr types. If T2 != T, it doesn't make
// sense, and if T2 == T, it still doesn't make sense because the same
// object can't be owned by two different scoped_ptrs.
template <class T2> bool operator==(SkTScopedPtr<T2> const& o2) const;
template <class T2> bool operator!=(SkTScopedPtr<T2> const& o2) const;
};
#endif