Abstract
A
key benefit of generic programming is its support for producing modules
with clean separation. In particular, generic algorithms are written to
work with a wide variety of types without requiring modifications to
them. The Runtime concept idiom extends this support by
allowing unmodified concrete types to behave in a runtime polymorphic
manner. In this paper, we describe one implementation of the runtime
concept idiom, in the domain of the C++ standard template library (STL).
We complement the runtime concept idiom with an algorithm library that
considers both type and concept information to maximize performance when
selecting algorithm implementations. We present two implementations,
one in ISO C++ and one using an experimental language extension. We use
our implementations to describe and measure the performance of
runtime-polymorphic analogs of several STL algorithms. The tests
demonstrate the effects of different compile-time vs. run-time algorithm
selection choices.
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