Commit Graph

2 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
DRC
bd49803f92 Use consistent/modern code formatting for pointers
The convention used by libjpeg:

    type * variable;

is not very common anymore, because it looks too much like
multiplication.  Some (particularly C++ programmers) prefer to tuck the
pointer symbol against the type:

    type* variable;

to emphasize that a pointer to a type is effectively a new type.
However, this can also be confusing, since defining multiple variables
on the same line would not work properly:

    type* variable1, variable2;  /* Only variable1 is actually a
                                    pointer. */

This commit reformats the entirety of the libjpeg-turbo code base so
that it uses the same code formatting convention for pointers that the
TurboJPEG API code uses:

    type *variable1, *variable2;

This seems to be the most common convention among C programmers, and
it is the convention used by other codec libraries, such as libpng and
libtiff.
2016-02-19 09:10:07 -06:00
DRC
24e92e9fc0 Using subdirectories unfortunately opened up a can of worms. In order to prevent object name conflicts, it is necessary to use the subdir-objects automake directive, but it simply doesn't work right on some of the versions of automake we still have to support. Another option would be to add a separate Makefile.am file to each subdirectory, but that requires maintaining a completely different set of build rules for each one. Fortunately, however, we're in the 21st century now, so we can use filenames longer than 8.3.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/libjpeg-turbo/code/trunk@1282 632fc199-4ca6-4c93-a231-07263d6284db
2014-05-10 09:53:34 +00:00