This changeset removes various heuristics and marker-traits
by a constraint to tuple_like types. Furthermore, several usages
of `apply` can thereby be generalised to work on any tuple_like.
This generalisation is essential for the passing generic data blocks
via `FeedManifold` into the node invocation
This resolves an intricate problem related to metaprogramming with
variadic templates and function signatures. Due to exceptional complexity,
a direct solution was blocked for several years, and required a better
organisation of the support code involved; several workarounds were
developed, gradually leading to a transition path, which could now
be completed in an focused clean-up effort over the last week.
Metaprogramming with sequences of types is organised into three layers:
- simple tasks can be solved with the standard facilities of the language,
using pattern match with variadic template specialisations
- the ''type-sequence'' construct `Types<T...>` takes the centre stage
for the explicit definition of collections of types; it can be re-bound
to other variadic templates and supports simple direct manipulation
- for more elaborate and advanced processing tasks, a ''Loki-style type list''
can be obtained from a type-sequence, allowing to perform recursive
list processing task with a technique similar to LISP.
Tuples and the ''C++ tuple protocol'' build upon variadic arguments
and are thus rather tedious to handle, especially in this situation here,
where the argument can ''sometimes be a tuple...''
Several years ago I made the observation that processing by explicit ''type sequences''
(Loki-style) is much simpler to handle and easier to lift to a generic level of processing.
Thus I'll attempt now to extract the ''iteration and extraction part'' of the logic into a new helper.
`lib::meta::ElmTypes<TUP>` allows to process all ''tuple-like types'' and generic ''type sequences'' uniformely
and enables to use both styles interchangably (btw, it is quite common to ''abuse'' `std::tuple` as a type sequence).
With this helper, we can now
- build a ''type sequence'' from any ''tuple-like'' object (and vice-versa)
- re-bind (i.e. transfer the template parameters to another template)
- apply some wrapper
- create AND / OR evaluations over the types