forked from M-Labs/nalgebra
Add comment explaining intermediate types for serialization
This commit is contained in:
parent
fe70a80e41
commit
583fde05fe
@ -279,6 +279,21 @@ mod serde_serialize {
|
||||
use super::CooMatrix;
|
||||
use serde::{de, Deserialize, Deserializer, Serialize, Serializer};
|
||||
|
||||
/// This is an intermediate type for (de)serializing `CooMatrix`.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// Deserialization requires using a `try_from_*` function for validation. We could have used
|
||||
/// the `remote = "Self"` trick (https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/1220) which allows
|
||||
/// to directly serialize/deserialize the original fields and combine it with validation.
|
||||
/// However, this would lead to nested serialization of the `CsMatrix` and `SparsityPattern`
|
||||
/// types. Instead, we decided that we want a more human-readable serialization format using
|
||||
/// field names like `row_indices` and `col_indices`. The easiest way to achieve this is to
|
||||
/// introduce an intermediate type. It also allows the serialization format to stay constant
|
||||
/// even if the internal layout in `nalgebra` changes.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// We want to avoid unnecessary copies when serializing (i.e. cloning slices into owned
|
||||
/// storage). Therefore, we use generic arguments to allow using slices during serialization and
|
||||
/// owned storage (i.e. `Vec`) during deserialization. Without a major update of serde, slices
|
||||
/// and `Vec`s should always (de)serialize identically.
|
||||
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)]
|
||||
struct CooMatrixSerializationData<Indices, Values> {
|
||||
nrows: usize,
|
||||
|
@ -525,6 +525,21 @@ mod serde_serialize {
|
||||
use super::CscMatrix;
|
||||
use serde::{de, Deserialize, Deserializer, Serialize, Serializer};
|
||||
|
||||
/// This is an intermediate type for (de)serializing `CscMatrix`.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// Deserialization requires using a `try_from_*` function for validation. We could have used
|
||||
/// the `remote = "Self"` trick (https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/1220) which allows
|
||||
/// to directly serialize/deserialize the original fields and combine it with validation.
|
||||
/// However, this would lead to nested serialization of the `CsMatrix` and `SparsityPattern`
|
||||
/// types. Instead, we decided that we want a more human-readable serialization format using
|
||||
/// field names like `col_offsets` and `row_indices`. The easiest way to achieve this is to
|
||||
/// introduce an intermediate type. It also allows the serialization format to stay constant
|
||||
/// even if the internal layout in `nalgebra` changes.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// We want to avoid unnecessary copies when serializing (i.e. cloning slices into owned
|
||||
/// storage). Therefore, we use generic arguments to allow using slices during serialization and
|
||||
/// owned storage (i.e. `Vec`) during deserialization. Without a major update of serde, slices
|
||||
/// and `Vec`s should always (de)serialize identically.
|
||||
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)]
|
||||
struct CscMatrixSerializationData<Indices, Values> {
|
||||
nrows: usize,
|
||||
|
@ -596,6 +596,21 @@ mod serde_serialize {
|
||||
use super::CsrMatrix;
|
||||
use serde::{de, Deserialize, Deserializer, Serialize, Serializer};
|
||||
|
||||
/// This is an intermediate type for (de)serializing `CsrMatrix`.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// Deserialization requires using a `try_from_*` function for validation. We could have used
|
||||
/// the `remote = "Self"` trick (https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/1220) which allows
|
||||
/// to directly serialize/deserialize the original fields and combine it with validation.
|
||||
/// However, this would lead to nested serialization of the `CsMatrix` and `SparsityPattern`
|
||||
/// types. Instead, we decided that we want a more human-readable serialization format using
|
||||
/// field names like `row_offsets` and `cal_indices`. The easiest way to achieve this is to
|
||||
/// introduce an intermediate type. It also allows the serialization format to stay constant
|
||||
/// even if the internal layout in `nalgebra` changes.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// We want to avoid unnecessary copies when serializing (i.e. cloning slices into owned
|
||||
/// storage). Therefore, we use generic arguments to allow using slices during serialization and
|
||||
/// owned storage (i.e. `Vec`) during deserialization. Without a major update of serde, slices
|
||||
/// and `Vec`s should always (de)serialize identically.
|
||||
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)]
|
||||
struct CsrMatrixSerializationData<Indices, Values> {
|
||||
nrows: usize,
|
||||
|
@ -294,6 +294,21 @@ mod serde_serialize {
|
||||
use super::SparsityPattern;
|
||||
use serde::{de, Deserialize, Deserializer, Serialize, Serializer};
|
||||
|
||||
/// This is an intermediate type for (de)serializing `SparsityPattern`.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// Deserialization requires using a `try_from_*` function for validation. We could have used
|
||||
/// the `remote = "Self"` trick (https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/1220) which allows
|
||||
/// to directly serialize/deserialize the original fields and combine it with validation.
|
||||
/// However, this would lead to nested serialization of the `CsMatrix` and `SparsityPattern`
|
||||
/// types. Instead, we decided that we want a more human-readable serialization format using
|
||||
/// field names like `major_offsets` and `minor_indices`. The easiest way to achieve this is to
|
||||
/// introduce an intermediate type. It also allows the serialization format to stay constant
|
||||
/// even when the internal layout in `nalgebra` changes.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// We want to avoid unnecessary copies when serializing (i.e. cloning slices into owned
|
||||
/// storage). Therefore, we use generic arguments to allow using slices during serialization and
|
||||
/// owned storage (i.e. `Vec`) during deserialization. Without a major update of serde, slices
|
||||
/// and `Vec`s should always (de)serialize identically.
|
||||
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)]
|
||||
struct SparsityPatternSerializationData<Indices> {
|
||||
major_dim: usize,
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user