throwIfNot sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
throwIfNot sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
throwIfNot sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
throwIfNot sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
throwIf sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
throwIf sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
throwIf sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
assertMsg sends our error message through a function call, even if the
error condition doesn't trigger. This requires a lot of thunk allocation
that can be easily avoided.
Nix 2.28 was the last release packaged with the monolithic
common-meson.nix expression and is no longer maintained upstream.
Drop it together with the now-unused common-meson.nix and nix-perl.nix
helpers and the storeDir/stateDir/confDir plumbing that only fed
that code path.
Thanks to moving the existing let variable out, this should have
identical performance for non-memoised calls, and improved performance
when caching the separator.