Discriminator
This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(October 2011) |
In distributed computing, a discriminator is a typed tag field present in OMG IDL discriminated union type and value definitions that determines which union member is selected in the current union instance.[1][2] Unlike in some conventional programming languages offering support for unions, discriminator in IDL is not identical to selected field name. Here is an example of IDL union type definition:
union Register switch (char)
{
case 'a':
case 'b': short AX;
case 'c': long EAX;
default: octet AL;
};
Effective value of the Register type may contain AX as selected field, but discriminator value may be either 'a' or 'b' and it is stored in memory separately. Therefore, IDL logically separates information about currently selected field name and union effective value from information about current discriminator value. In the example above, discriminator value may be anything of the following: 'a', 'b', 'c', as well as all other characters belonging to the IDL char
type, since the default
branch specified in the example Register type allows use of the remaining characters as well.
Other languages[]
The Microsoft Interface Definition Language also supports tagged unions, allowing to choose the discriminator via an attribute in an enclosing structure or function.[3]
References[]
- ^ CORBA/IIOP Specification 3.0.3 Archived October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, March 12, 2004, OMG.org
- ^ CORBA 3.0 - IDL Syntax and Semantics chapter, March 12, 2004, OMG.org
- ^ Microsoft discriminator attribute documentation
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- Programming language topic stubs