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I want to generate a constant array power[501] = {1, p % MODER, p*p % MODER, p*p*p % MODER, ..., p^500 % MODER}, of which p is an constant number.

I know I could generate p^n % MODER by using the following code:

template<int a, int n> struct pow
{
  static const int value = a * pow<a, n-1>::value % MODER;
};
template<int a> struct pow<a, 0>
{
  static const int value = 1;
};

And it does work!

My question is if I could generate the array that I want?

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  • What is MODER? Some constant? Jul 26, 2012 at 8:46

2 Answers 2

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You can use BOOST_PP_ENUM as:

#include <iostream>
#include <boost/preprocessor/repetition/enum.hpp>

#define MODER 10

template<int a, int n> struct pow
{
  static const int value = a * pow<a, n-1>::value % MODER;
};
template<int a> struct pow<a, 0>
{
  static const int value = 1;
};

#define ORDER(count, i, data) pow<data,i>::value

int main() {
  const int p = 3;
  int const a[] = { BOOST_PP_ENUM(10, ORDER, p) };
  std::size_t const n = sizeof(a)/sizeof(int);
  for(std::size_t i = 0 ; i != n ; ++i ) 
    std::cout << a[i] << "\n";
  return 0;
}

Output:

1
3
9
7
1
3
9
7
1
3

See online demo

The line:

int const a[] = { BOOST_PP_ENUM(10, ORDER, p) };

expands to this:

int const a[] = { pow<p,0>::value, pow<p,1>::value, ...., pow<p,9>::value};
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  • Does this deal with integer overflow? int^500 is going to be a problem I'd think...
    – tmpearce
    Jul 26, 2012 at 8:54
  • @tmpearce: That is a problem anyway irrespective of whether you use BOOST_PP_ENUM or not. It is a problem with BOOST_PP_ENUM itself. It is problem with the definition of pow class template. If you handle that case, implement pow in such a way to handle this. Simple! Jul 26, 2012 at 8:55
  • Thanks a lot. But whatif i don't have a boost library, just g++? is there no solution? Jul 26, 2012 at 8:58
  • @abcdabcd987: then you've to either implement the functionality of BOOST_PP_ENUM yourself, or initialize the array at runtime! Jul 26, 2012 at 8:59
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Unless n has an upper bound, I would presume that that is impossible. Check this question out. There are ways to make the preprocessor look like a Turing-complete machine but only if you accept the fact that your code size should increase in the order of n, which is not better than placing a precomputed array by hand.

Important Update: You should see this question too. It seems that not the preprocessor but the template engine is indeed Turing-complete (at least can do recursion). So, now I suspect that the answer is yes.

1
  • It is no C++ solution. It is not C solution either. It is only C99 solution. P99 is available in C99 only. Jul 26, 2012 at 9:05

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