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b4d8e166d8
The way we use classes like Kernel::KResultOr<T> and AK::Result<T, E> makes checking for errors (and short-circuiting returns) quite verbose. This patch adds a new TRY(expression) macro that either evaluates to the released result of the expression if successful, or returns the error if not. Before: auto foo_or_error = get_foo(); if (foo_or_error.is_error()) return foo_or_error.release_error(); auto foo = foo_or_error.release_value(); After: auto foo = TRY(get_foo()); The macro uses a GNU C++ extension which is supported by GCC, Clang, Intel C++, and possibly others. It's not *ideal*, but since it makes our codebase considerably nicer, let's try(!) it out. :^) Co-authored-by: Ali Mohammad Pur <mpfard@serenityos.org>
19 lines
547 B
C
19 lines
547 B
C
/*
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* Copyright (c) 2021, Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
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*
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* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
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*/
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#pragma once
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// NOTE: This macro works with any result type that has the expected APIs.
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// It's designed with AK::Result and Kernel::KResult in mind.
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#define TRY(expression) \
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({ \
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auto result = (expression); \
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if (result.is_error()) \
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return result.release_error(); \
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result.release_value(); \
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})
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