Summary:
I was watching a classic magnificent talk about modern C++ by Herb Sutter and I was totally sold on double down on using `auto` in our codebase. Surprisingly, 95% of the code base already follows Herb's guidence; I just changed the last 5% to make it consistent.
All those changes must work *exactly* like it was before.
The talk: https://youtu.be/xnqTKD8uD64?t=28m25s
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D9753301
fbshipit-source-id: 9629aa485a5d6e51806cc96306c297284d4f90b8
Summary: Unused loads hurt readability and take time to process.
Reviewed By: hramos
Differential Revision: D9494120
fbshipit-source-id: 455b56efadab1cb976344cffcb427772bfda2f71
Summary:
@public
Previously, all ConcreteShadowNode subclasses had to override `getComponentName()` function to specialize a name of the component. And often it was all that those subclasses do. Now, it's a template argument; and many ShadowNode classes can be created as oneliners via *just* specializing ConcreteShadowNode template.
Unfortunately, C++ does not allow to use `std::string`s or string literals as template arguments, but it allows to use pointers. Moreover, those pointers must point to some linked data, hence, those values must be declared in .cpp (not .h) files. For simplicity, we put those constants in Props classes, (but this is not a strong requirement).
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D8942826
fbshipit-source-id: 4fd517e2485eb8f8c20a51df9b3496941856d8a5
Summary:
@public
There is no reason to have it inside View; it deserves that.
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D8757012
fbshipit-source-id: 881b54008b51614cd203ab97811494fa7c30e4ef