.. Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one .. or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file .. distributed with this work for additional information .. regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file .. to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the .. "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance .. with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at .. http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 .. Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, .. software distributed under the License is distributed on an .. "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY .. KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the .. specific language governing permissions and limitations .. under the License. =================================== Working with the C++ Implementation =================================== This section of the cookbook goes over basic concepts that will be needed regardless of how you intend to use the Arrow C++ implementation. .. contents:: Working with Status and Result ============================== C++ libraries often have to choose between throwing exceptions and returning error codes. Arrow chooses to return Status and Result objects as a middle ground. This makes it clear when a function can fail and is easier to use than integer arrow codes. It is important to always check the value of a returned Status object to ensure that the operation succeeded. However, this can quickly become tedious: .. recipe:: ../code/basic_arrow.cc ReturnNotOkNoMacro :caption: Checking the status of every function manually :dedent: 2 The macro :c:macro:`ARROW_RETURN_NOT_OK` will take care of some of this boilerplate for you. It will run the contained expression and check the resulting ``Status`` or ``Result`` object. If it failed then it will return the failure. .. recipe:: ../code/basic_arrow.cc ReturnNotOk :caption: Using ARROW_RETURN_NOT_OK to check the status :dedent: 2 Using the Visitor Pattern ========================= Arrow classes :cpp:class:`arrow::DataType`, :cpp:class:`arrow::Scalar`, and :cpp:class:`arrow::Array` have specialized subclasses for each Arrow type. In order to specialize logic for each subclass, you can use the visitor pattern. Arrow provides inline template functions that allow you to call visitors efficiently: * :cpp:func:`arrow::VisitTypeInline` * :cpp:func:`arrow::VisitScalarInline` * :cpp:func:`arrow::VisitArrayInline` Generate Random Data -------------------- See example at :ref:`Generate Random Data Example`. Generalize Computations Across Arrow Types ------------------------------------------ Array visitors can be useful when writing functions that can handle multiple array types. However, implementing a visitor for each type individually can be excessively verbose. Fortunately, Arrow provides type traits that allow you to write templated functions to handle subsets of types. The example below demonstrates a table sum function that can handle any integer or floating point array with only a single visitor implementation by leveraging :cpp:type:`arrow::enable_if_number`. .. literalinclude:: ../code/basic_arrow.cc :language: cpp :linenos: :start-at: class TableSummation :end-at: }; // TableSummation :caption: Using visitor pattern that can compute sum of table with any numeric type .. recipe:: ../code/basic_arrow.cc VisitorSummationExample :dedent: 2