Forums WoW Modding Support Archives WoWModding Support Archives [DiscordArchive] What the heck is a "non-blittable" type in .NET?

[DiscordArchive] What the heck is a "non-blittable" type in .NET?

[DiscordArchive] What the heck is a "non-blittable" type in .NET?

Pages (2): Previous 1 2
rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM
#11
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:09.276000+00:00
Original source

List<struct> does not really work
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM #11

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:09.276000+00:00
Original source

List<struct> does not really work

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM
#12
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:25.412000+00:00
Original source

Because the indexer will get you a temporary copy
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM #12

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:25.412000+00:00
Original source

Because the indexer will get you a temporary copy

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM
#13
Archived author: Quantam • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:44.447000+00:00
Original source

Ahhh right
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM #13

Archived author: Quantam • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:44.447000+00:00
Original source

Ahhh right

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM
#14
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:56.180000+00:00
Original source

Unless they fixed that with the recent ref T changes, which I'm not completely aware of, and too lazy to open ILSpy
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:06 AM #14

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:06:56.180000+00:00
Original source

Unless they fixed that with the recent ref T changes, which I'm not completely aware of, and too lazy to open ILSpy

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM
#15
Archived author: Quantam • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:01.054000+00:00
Original source

Though still more space efficient
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM #15

Archived author: Quantam • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:01.054000+00:00
Original source

Though still more space efficient

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM
#16
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:21.606000+00:00
Original source

Depends on the size of the type
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM #16

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:21.606000+00:00
Original source

Depends on the size of the type

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM
#17
Archived author: Quantam • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:28.840000+00:00
Original source

Sure
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM #17

Archived author: Quantam • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:28.840000+00:00
Original source

Sure

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM
#18
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:56.286000+00:00
Original source

My rule of thumb is to always start off with reference types
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:07 AM #18

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:07:56.286000+00:00
Original source

My rule of thumb is to always start off with reference types

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:08 AM
#19
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:08:03.008000+00:00
Original source

and then try to see what can become a value type
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:08 AM #19

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:08:03.008000+00:00
Original source

and then try to see what can become a value type

rektbyfaith
Administrator
0
06-17-2018, 10:08 AM
#20
Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:08:13.421000+00:00
Original source

and if there's any benefit to it besides reduced heap fragmentation and allocations
rektbyfaith
06-17-2018, 10:08 AM #20

Archived author: Warpten • Posted: 2018-06-17T10:08:13.421000+00:00
Original source

and if there's any benefit to it besides reduced heap fragmentation and allocations

Pages (2): Previous 1 2
Recently Browsing
 1 Guest(s)
Recently Browsing
 1 Guest(s)