It is no longer legal to initialize arrays and structs with single
scalar values (that ispc used to smear across the array/struct
elements). Now, initializers in variable declarations must be
{ }-delimited lists, with one element per struct member or array
element, respectively.
There were a few problems with the previous implementation of the
functionality to initialize from scalars. First, the expression
would be evaluated once per value initialized, so if it had side-effects,
the wrong thing would happen. Next, for large multidimensional arrays,
the generated code would be a long series of move instructions, rather
than loops (and this in turn made LLVM take a long time.)
While both of these problems are fixable, it's a non-trivial
amount of re-plumbing for a questionable feature anyway.
Fixes issue #50.
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@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ struct Foo {
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};
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export void f_fu(uniform float RET[], uniform float aFOO[], uniform float b) {
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float a = aFOO[programIndex];
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uniform Foo myFoo[3] = a;
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uniform Foo myFoo[3] = { { a, a }, {a, a}, {a, a} };
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int i = 1;
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varying Foo barFoo = myFoo[i];
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RET[programIndex] = barFoo.x;
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