It seems everywhere I read that either a library boasts if not needing RTTI or an article advises against its use. What is so bad about it and why is it such a good thing not to need it?
Thanks
Because using it usually means you are subverting polymorphism (if (type is foo) { do this; } else if (type is bar) { do that; } else ...
), which usually means you have engineered yourself into a corner and need to rethink your design.
Because authors of C++ compilers put a lot of effort into optimising polymorphic behaviour, but less so into optimising use of RTTI.
C++ allows a lot of static tricks with templates thus reducing the need of RTTI (everything is generic at the compile time, but concrete at the run-time).
On the contra, the "true" (SmallTalk-like) OOP way of dealing with classes requires dynamic binding and RTTI.
C++ allows both, but excessive dynamic_casts and virtual functions may and do degrade performance.
Many stripped down embedded systems will have simpler/smaller implementations that don't support RTTI. If your library doesn't need it, then you are portable to more systems.
RTTI introduces a bigger role for CRT(C Runtime). C++ developers treasure speed of execution. The last thing one wants is introduction of runtime which would relatively slow the application.
RTTI does something that globally unique ordinals specified at design time can do much better. Two reasons for not using RTTI.
Performance : It is non trivial to come up with a an implementation that scales as well as using ordinals / enums to represent types, and since you don't want namespace collisions you have to use strings, not just strings, globally unique strings. In scripting languages everything is a string inately, thus there is no frowning in these sorts of languages.
Design Elegance : Ordinal based typing works, and if your using it, chances are you had the foresight to design the system properly from the get-go. Such design are pretty much always better than relying on RTTI.
switch
statements. It also makes the very system hard to extend: what happens if two extensions use the same identifier? RTTI is slightly better in this regard, though not by much.
Jun 27, 2012 at 19:13
It is not a good thing (to not have/use RTTI). Binding should be as late as possible (but not later). Speed and power consumption needs limit you in how late you can bind, but developments in chip technology mean more and more projects can afford to do later binding. Later binding allows design decisions to be made later, when more information is available allowing better decisions.