Commit Graph

197 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
e7912dfa19 Attributes: Infrastructure for generic 8-bit integer data type
This commit adds infrastructure for 8 bit signed integer attributes.
This can be useful given the discussion in T94193, where we want to
store spline type, Bezier handle type, and other small enums as
attributes.

This is only exposed in the interface in the attribute lists, so it
shouldn't be an option in geometry nodes, at least for now.
I expect that this type won't be used directly very often, it
should mostly be cast to an enum type. However, with support
for 8 bit integers, it also makes sense to add things like mixing
implementations for consistency.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13721
2022-02-04 10:29:11 -06:00
b4563ab2df Cleanup: avoid generating some functions in all translation units
Every translation unit that included the modified headers generated
some extra code, even though it was not used. This adds unnecessary
compile time overhead and is annoying when investigating the
generated assembly.
2022-02-04 17:18:56 +01:00
43e3a33082 Cleanup: spelling in comments 2022-01-24 14:35:23 +11:00
c0d0e2788b Cleanup: compiler warnings with clang 2022-01-14 15:17:22 +01:00
d43b5791e0 BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates
This patch implements the vector types (i.e:`float2`) by making heavy
usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector
classes (inside the `blender::math` namespace) and are not vector size
dependent for the most part.

In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming
to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication.

####Motivations:
- We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++.
This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others
we currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were
asking for many more code duplication.
- Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size.
- We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector
functions should be static and not in the class namespace.
- Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their
incompleteness.
- The current state of the `BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh` is a
bit of a let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each
others with different codestyles, and some functions that should be
static are not (i.e: `float3::reflect()`).

####Upsides:
- Still support `.x, .y, .z, .w` for readability.
- Compact, readable and easilly extendable.
- All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types
and can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization
let us define exception for special class (like mpq).
- With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance
is the same.

####Downsides:
- Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are
rarelly caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are
quite trivial) but by the type conversions.
- Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since
the usage is not really widespread.
- Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length.
For instance, one can't call `len_squared_v3v3` in
`math::length_squared()` and call it a day.
- Type cast does not work with the template version of the `math::`
vector functions. Meaning you need to manually cast `float *` and
`(float *)[3]` to `float3` for the function calls.
i.e: `math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);`
- Some parts might loose in readability:
`float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())`
becoming
`math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))`
But I propose, when appropriate, to use
`using namespace blender::math;` on function local or file scope to
increase readability.
`dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))`

####Consideration:
- Include back `.length()` method. It is quite handy and is more C++
oriented.
- I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement. It felt
like too much for what we need and would be difficult to extend / modify
to our needs.
- I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential
copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted.
- This touches `delaunay_2d.cc` and the intersection code. I would like
to know @howardt opinion on the matter.
- The `noexcept` on the copy constructor of `mpq(2|3)` is being removed.
But according to @JacquesLucke it is not a real problem for now.

I would like to give a huge thanks to @JacquesLucke who helped during this
and pushed me to reduce the duplication further.

Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13791
2022-01-12 12:57:07 +01:00
fb6bd88644 Revert "BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates"
Includes unwanted changes

This reverts commit 46e049d0ce.
2022-01-12 12:50:02 +01:00
Clment Foucault
46e049d0ce BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates
This patch implements the vector types (i.e:`float2`) by making heavy
usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector
classes (inside the `blender::math` namespace) and are not vector size
dependent for the most part.

In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming
to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication.

####Motivations:
 - We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++.
 This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others
 we currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were
 asking for many more code duplication.
 - Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size.
 - We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector
 functions should be static and not in the class namespace.
 - Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their
 incompleteness.
 - The current state of the `BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh` is a
 bit of a let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each
 others with different codestyles, and some functions that should be
 static are not (i.e: `float3::reflect()`).

####Upsides:
 - Still support `.x, .y, .z, .w` for readability.
 - Compact, readable and easilly extendable.
 - All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types
 and can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization
 let us define exception for special class (like mpq).
 - With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance
 is the same.

####Downsides:
 - Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are
 rarelly caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are
 quite trivial) but by the type conversions.
 - Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since
 the usage is not really widespread.
 - Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length.
 For instance, one can't call `len_squared_v3v3` in
 `math::length_squared()` and call it a day.
 - Type cast does not work with the template version of the `math::`
 vector functions. Meaning you need to manually cast `float *` and
 `(float *)[3]` to `float3` for the function calls.
 i.e: `math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);`
 - Some parts might loose in readability:
 `float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())`
 becoming
 `math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))`
 But I propose, when appropriate, to use
 `using namespace blender::math;` on function local or file scope to
 increase readability.
 `dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))`

####Consideration:
 - Include back `.length()` method. It is quite handy and is more C++
 oriented.
 - I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement. It felt
 like too much for what we need and would be difficult to extend / modify
 to our needs.
 - I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential
 copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted.
 - This touches `delaunay_2d.cc` and the intersection code. I would like
 to know @howardt opinion on the matter.
 - The `noexcept` on the copy constructor of `mpq(2|3)` is being removed.
 But according to @JacquesLucke it is not a real problem for now.

I would like to give a huge thanks to @JacquesLucke who helped during this
and pushed me to reduce the duplication further.

Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13791
2022-01-12 12:47:43 +01:00
e5766752d0 Revert "BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates"
Reverted because the commit removes a lot of commits.

This reverts commit a2c1c368af.
2022-01-12 12:44:26 +01:00
a2c1c368af BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates
This patch implements the vector types (i.e:float2) by making heavy
usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector
classes (inside the blender::math namespace) and are not vector size
dependent for the most part.

In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming
to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication.

Motivations:
- We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++.
  This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others we
  currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were asking
  for many more code duplication.
- Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size.
- We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector functions
  should be static and not in the class namespace.
- Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their
  incompleteness.
- The current state of the BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh is a bit of a
  let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each others with
  different codestyles, and some functions that should be static are not
  (i.e: float3::reflect()).

Upsides:
- Still support .x, .y, .z, .w for readability.
- Compact, readable and easilly extendable.
- All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types and
  can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization let us
  define exception for special class (like mpq).
- With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance is
  the same.

Downsides:
- Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are rarelly
  caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are quite trivial)
  but by the type conversions.
- Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since the
  usage is not really widespread.
- Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length. For
  instance, one can't call len_squared_v3v3 in math::length_squared() and
  call it a day.
- Type cast does not work with the template version of the math:: vector
  functions. Meaning you need to manually cast float * and (float *)[3] to
  float3 for the function calls.
  i.e: math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);
- Some parts might loose in readability:
  float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())
  becoming
  math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))
  But I propose, when appropriate, to use
  using namespace blender::math; on function local or file scope to
  increase readability. dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))

Consideration:
- Include back .length() method. It is quite handy and is more C++
  oriented.
- I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement.
  It felt like too much for what we need and would be difficult to
  extend / modify to our needs.
- I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential
  copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted.
- This touches delaunay_2d.cc and the intersection code. I would like to
  know @Howard Trickey (howardt) opinion on the matter.
- The noexcept on the copy constructor of mpq(2|3) is being removed.
  But according to @Jacques Lucke (JacquesLucke) it is not a real problem
  for now.

I would like to give a huge thanks to @Jacques Lucke (JacquesLucke) who
helped during this and pushed me to reduce the duplication further.

Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke

Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D13791
2022-01-12 12:19:39 +01:00
3d3bc74884 Cleanup: remove redundant const qualifiers for POD types
MSVC used to warn about const mismatch for arguments passed by value.
Remove these as newer versions of MSVC no longer show this warning.
2022-01-07 14:16:26 +11:00
675d3cdd69 Cleanup: Clang tidy 2022-01-03 13:52:55 -06:00
8be217ada5 Geometry Nodes: add field node type for constants
It is common to have fields that contain a constant value. Before this
commit, such constants were represented by operation nodes which
don't have inputs. Having a special node type for constants makes
working with them a bit cheaper.

It also allows skipping some unnecessary processing when evaluating
fields, because constant fields can be detected more easily.

This commit also generalizes the concept of field node types a bit.
2022-01-02 14:27:16 +01:00
51a131ddbc BLI: add utility to check if type is any specific type
This adds `blender::is_same_any_v` which is the almost the same as
`std::is_same_v`. The difference is that it allows for checking multiple
types at the same time.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13673
2021-12-27 16:08:11 +01:00
474adc6f88 Refactor: Simplify spreadsheet handling of cell values
Previously we used a `CellValue` class to hold the data for a cell,
and called a function to fill it whenever necessary. This is an
unnecessary complication when we have virtual generic arrays
and most data is already easily accessible that way anyway.
This patch removes `CellValue` and uses `fn::GVArray` to provide
access to data instead.

In the future, if rows have different types within a single column,
we can use a `GVArray` of `blender::Any` to interface with the drawing.

Along with that, the use of virtual arrays made it easy to do a
few other cleanups:
 - Use selection domain interpolations from rB5841f8656d95
   for the mesh selection filter.
 - Change the row filter to only calculate for necessary indices.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13478
2021-12-15 09:34:13 -06:00
8e2c9f2dd3 Geometry Nodes: simplify using selection when evaluating fields
We often had to use two `FieldEvaluator` instances to first evaluate
the selection and then the remaining fields. Now both can be done
with a single `FieldEvaluator`. This results in less boilerplate code in
many cases.

Performance is not affected by this change. In a separate patch we
could improve performance by reusing evaluated sub-fields that are
used by the selection and the other fields.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13571
2021-12-14 15:40:27 +01:00
8ba6302696 Geometry Nodes: fix combining field inputs
This was an oversight in rB7b88a4a3ba7eb9b839afa6c42d070812a3af7997.
2021-12-13 13:51:42 +01:00
1686979747 Geometry Nodes: move up destruct instructions in procedure
This implements an optimization pass for multi-function procedures.
It optimizes memory reuse by moving destruct instructions up.
For more details see the in-code comment.

In very large fields with many short lived intermediate values, this change
can improve performance 3-4x. Furthermore, in such cases, peak memory
consumption is reduced significantly (e.g. 100x lower peak memory usage).

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13548
2021-12-13 13:28:33 +01:00
36c6b2e893 Cleanup: spelling in comments
Also move notes about where noise functions come from
into the function body as it's not relavant to the public doc-string.
2021-12-13 16:22:20 +11:00
92237f11eb Geometry Nodes: improve memory reuse in procedure executor
This reduces the number of separate memory allocations done
by the multi-function procedure executor (which is used by the
field evaluation).

Now a linear memory allocator is used to allocate all intermediate
values. Furthermore, more buffers are reused when possible. This
reduces the total amount of allocated memory and improves
cache efficiency because the values are more likely to be in cache
already.

The performance improvement of this patch are most noticable
when few elements are processed by many functions. The situation
will improve even more with D13548, because then buffers can actually
be reused in practice. I measured up to 20% faster field evaluation
in extreme cases with this change.
2021-12-12 10:34:02 +01:00
b444e1be0f Cleanup: use struct instead of class
Using `class` and `struct` for the same type can cause issues on windows.
2021-12-12 08:58:55 +01:00
7b88a4a3ba Geometry Nodes: remove accidental exponential time algorithm
Calling `foreach_field_input` on a highly nested field (we do that
often) has an exponential running time in the number of nodes.
That is because the same node may be visited many times.
This made Blender freeze on some setups that should work just fine.
Now every field keeps track of its inputs all the time. That replaces
the exponential algorithm with constant time access.
2021-12-11 11:26:55 +01:00
7f4878ac7f Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for 'functions'
Ref T92709
2021-12-09 21:17:16 +11:00
2d4c7fa896 Geometry Nodes: reduce code duplication with new GeometyrFieldInput
Most of our field inputs are currently specific to geometry. This patch introduces
a new `GeometryFieldInput` that reduces the overhead of adding new geometry
field input.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13489
2021-12-06 19:13:24 +01:00
f86331a033 Geometry Nodes: deduplicate virtual array implementations
For some underlying data (e.g. spans) we had two virtual array
implementations. One for the mutable and one for the immutable
case. Now that most code does not deal with the virtual array
implementations directly anymore (since rBrBd4c868da9f97a),
we can get away with sharing one implementation for both cases.
This means that we have to do a `const_cast` in a few places, but
this is an implementation detail that does not leak into "user code"
(only when explicitly casting a `VArrayImpl` to a `VMutableArrayImpl`,
which should happen nowhere).
2021-11-26 14:47:15 +01:00
63342861e7 Fix: error in previous commit
Forgot to actually slice the span in rB6b5e1cfacab4c4605ec2d7bfef360389afe849be.
2021-11-26 13:29:24 +01:00
658fd8df0b Geometry Nodes: refactor multi-threading in field evaluation
Previously, there was a fixed grain size for all multi-functions. That was
not sufficient because some functions could benefit a lot from smaller
grain sizes.

This refactors adds a new `MultiFunction::call_auto` method which has the
same effect as just calling `MultiFunction::call` but additionally figures
out how to execute the specific multi-function efficiently. It determines
a good grain size and decides whether the mask indices should be shifted
or not.

Most multi-function evaluations benefit from this, but medium sized work
loads (1000 - 50000 elements) benefit from it the most. Especially when
expensive multi-functions (e.g. noise) is involved. This is because for
smaller work loads, threading is rarely used and for larger work loads
threading worked fine before already.

With this patch, multi-functions can specify execution hints, that allow
the caller to execute it most efficiently. These execution hints still
have to be added to more functions.

Some performance measurements of a field evaluation involving noise and
math nodes, ordered by the number of elements being evaluated:
```
1,000,000: 133 ms   -> 120 ms
  100,000:  30 ms   ->  18 ms
   10,000:  20 ms   ->   2.7 ms
    1,000:   4 ms   ->   0.5 ms
      100:   0.5 ms ->   0.4 ms
```
2021-11-26 11:06:16 +01:00
6b5e1cfaca Geometry Nodes: better devirtualization for sliced virtual arrays
Under some circumstances that can lead to more than a 2x
performance increase, because math nodes can better optimize
for the case when the slice is a single value or span.
2021-11-26 10:08:19 +01:00
2cda65a35a Geometry Nodes: avoid allocation when construct varray for single value
Previously, `GVArray::ForSingle` would always allocate a copy of the passed
in value. Now it only does so when the value is too large or not trivial.
2021-11-26 09:59:41 +01:00
447378753d BLI: remove special cases for is_span and is_single methods
Those were not implemented consistently and don't really help in practice.
2021-11-25 13:51:23 +01:00
499c24ce75 BLI: add slice method to index mask and generic span 2021-11-24 17:49:33 +01:00
47276b8470 Geometry Nodes: reduce overhead when processing single values
Currently the geometry nodes evaluator always stores a field for every
type that supports it, even if it is just a single value. This results in a lot
of overhead when there are many sockets that just contain a single
value, which is often the case.

This introduces a new `ValueOrField<T>` type that is used by the geometry
nodes evaluator. Now a field will only be created when it is actually
necessary. See D13307 for more details. In extrem cases this can speed
up the evaluation 2-3x (those cases are probably never hit in practice
though, but it's good to get rid of unnecessary overhead nevertheless).

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13307
2021-11-23 14:49:26 +01:00
c850189adf Cleanup: make naming more consistent 2021-11-22 09:48:36 +01:00
873f6148ad Functions: remove test for dynamic name
This was broken in rB6ee2abde82ef121cd6e927995053ac33afdbb438.
2021-11-21 13:08:23 +01:00
940e6525c7 Functions: fix compile error in tests 2021-11-21 13:06:05 +01:00
15011e0b70 Functions: use static string for parameter names
The idea behind this change is the same as in
rB6ee2abde82ef121cd6e927995053ac33afdbb438.

A `MultiFunction::debug_parameter_name` method could be
added separately when necessary.
2021-11-21 12:57:34 +01:00
6ee2abde82 Functions: use static names for multi-functions
Previously, the function names were stored in `std::string` and were often
created dynamically (especially when the function just output a constant).
This resulted in a lot of overhead.

Now the function name is just a `const char *` that should be statically
allocated. This is good enough for the majority of cases. If a multi-function
needs a more dynamic name, it can override the `MultiFunction::debug_name`
method.

In my test file with >400,000 simple math nodes, the execution time improves from
3s to 1s.
2021-11-21 12:48:07 +01:00
c3422c48ad Cleanup: remove dummy multi function 2021-11-17 12:33:18 +01:00
4c988eb3e1 Fix error with makefiles compilation
Use 'template' keyword to treat 'is' as a dependent template name
2021-11-16 20:46:33 -03:00
d4c868da9f Geometry Nodes: refactor virtual array system
Goals of this refactor:
* Simplify creating virtual arrays.
* Simplify passing virtual arrays around.
* Simplify converting between typed and generic virtual arrays.
* Reduce memory allocations.

As a quick reminder, a virtual arrays is a data structure that behaves like an
array (i.e. it can be accessed using an index). However, it may not actually
be stored as array internally. The two most important implementations
of virtual arrays are those that correspond to an actual plain array and those
that have the same value for every index. However, many more
implementations exist for various reasons (interfacing with legacy attributes,
unified iterator over all points in multiple splines, ...).

With this refactor the core types (`VArray`, `GVArray`, `VMutableArray` and
`GVMutableArray`) can be used like "normal values". They typically live
on the stack. Before, they were usually inside a `std::unique_ptr`. This makes
passing them around much easier. Creation of new virtual arrays is also
much simpler now due to some constructors. Memory allocations are
reduced by making use of small object optimization inside the core types.

Previously, `VArray` was a class with virtual methods that had to be overridden
to change the behavior of a the virtual array. Now,`VArray` has a fixed size
and has no virtual methods. Instead it contains a `VArrayImpl` that is
similar to the old `VArray`. `VArrayImpl` should rarely ever be used directly,
unless a new virtual array implementation is added.

To support the small object optimization for many `VArrayImpl` classes,
a new `blender::Any` type is added. It is similar to `std::any` with two
additional features. It has an adjustable inline buffer size and alignment.
The inline buffer size of `std::any` can't be relied on and is usually too
small for our use case here. Furthermore, `blender::Any` can store
additional user-defined type information without increasing the
stack size.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12986
2021-11-16 10:16:30 +01:00
fb4b737518 CMake: add missing headers to CMake lists 2021-11-08 17:00:36 +11:00
fd477e738d Geometry Nodes: remove reference to anonymous attributes in tooltips
This changes socket inspection for fields according to T91881.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13006
2021-10-26 15:32:01 +02:00
cc388651eb Fix T92327: use default value when field is passed into data socket
Previously, the computed value passed into the data socket could depend
on the actual field a bit. However, given that the link is marked as invalid
in the ui, the user should not depend on this behavior.
Using a default value is consistent with other cases when there are
invalid links.
2021-10-24 17:53:19 +02:00
40c3b8836b Geometry Nodes: Make Random ID a builtin attribute, remove sockets
In order to address feedback that the "Stable ID" was not easy enough
to use, remove the "Stable ID" output from the distribution node and
the input from the instance on points node. Instead, the nodes write
or read a builtin named attribute called `id`. In the future we may
add more attributes like `edge_id` and `face_id`.

The downside is that more behavior is invisible, which is les
expected now that most attributes are passed around with node links.
This behavior will have to be explained in the manual.

The random value node's "ID" input that had an implicit index input
is converted to a special implicit input that uses the `id` attribute
if possible, but otherwise defaults to the index. There is no way to
tell in the UI which it uses, except by knowing that rule and checking
in the spreadsheet for the id attribute.

Because it isn't always possible to create stable randomness, this
attribute does not always exist, and it will be possible to remove it
when we have the attribute remove node back, to improve performance.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12903
2021-10-20 10:54:54 -05:00
967fec6883 Cleanup: sort cmake file lists 2021-10-20 09:17:46 +11:00
a3457704fb Geometry Nodes: De-duplicate index input nodes during evaluation
We do this in other nodes to reduce overhead of using the same node more
than once. I don't think it will make a difference with index nodes
currently, but at least it's consistent.
2021-10-18 20:13:37 -05:00
eb0d216dc1 Geometry Nodes: decouple multi-function lifetimes from modifier
Previously, some multi-functions were allocated in a resource scope.
This was fine as long as the multi-functions were only needed during
the current evaluation of the node tree. However, now cases arise
that require the multi-functions to be alive after the modifier is finished.
For example, we want to evaluate fields created with geometry nodes
outside of geometry nodes.

To make this work, `std::shared_ptr` has to be used in a few more places.
Realistically, this shouldn't have a noticable impact on performance.
If this does become a bottleneck in the future, we can think about ways
to make this work without using `shared_ptr` for multi-functions that
are only used once.
2021-10-18 11:46:21 +02:00
b42ce0c54c Functions: Generic array data structure
Sometimes it's useful to pass around a set of values with a generic
type. The virtual array data structures allow this, but they don't
have logical ownership. My initial use case for this is as a return
type for the functions that interpolate curve attributes to evaluated
points, but a need for this data structure has come up in a few other
places as well. It also reduced the need for templates.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D11103
2021-10-14 11:06:18 -05:00
2b66b372bc Cleanup: use doxygen sections 2021-10-05 11:10:25 +11:00
64d07ffcc3 Cleanup: move methods out of field classes
This makes it easier to scan through the classes and simplifies
testing the compile time impact of having these methods in the header.
2021-10-03 16:47:54 +02:00
960b21e1d7 Cleanup: sort cmake file lists 2021-09-29 07:30:34 +10:00