this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2024
281 points (93.5% liked)

Programmer Humor

32483 readers
364 users here now

Post funny things about programming here! (Or just rant about your favourite programming language.)

Rules:

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml 11 points 2 days ago (2 children)

It's not hard, just if you're doing it for a struct with a lot of fields it's a lot of boilerplate

[–] GetOffMyLan@programming.dev 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I just use the HashCode class and compare the results.

Pretty sure there's a source generator for it as well nowadays.

[–] Deckweiss@lemmy.world -5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

My IDE can do that for me. And it was able to do that pre AI boom. Yes, the code ends up more verbose, but I just collapse it.

So from a modern dev UX perspective, this shouldn't be a major difference.

[–] kazaika@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

What if youre working with library types? The problem is not not you compare a bunch of fields but that the implementation on those members is most likely bad.

[–] porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 days ago

Even if the tool works perfectly, you have to run it every time you change something. It's not the end of the world, but it's still much nicer to just have a macro to derive it at compile time.