>
Ideally there should be two preferences. One is a switch controlling whether files with include guards are indexed multiple times or not, Another, which takes effect when headers with include guards are indexed only once, provides a list of headers that
are indexed multiple times despite the include guards.
+1
That sounds reasonable. In this way we have a simple option for enabling/disabling the more time-consuming part, which does not need much configuration overhead.
And an advanced option for users who need it.
Regards
Thomas
Ideally there should be two preferences. One is a switch controlling whether files with include guards are indexed multiple times or not, Another, which takes effect when headers with include guards are indexed only once,
provides a list of headers that are indexed multiple times despite the include guards.
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 7:44 PM, Nathan Ridge <zeratul976@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I would personally like to see a preference to make it possible to disable this optimization. It could be left on by default but at least it will be possible for small and medium-sized projects
to get more a more accurate index. Would that be acceptable?
+1
I can see different users falling on different sides
of this tradeoff between accuracy and performance.
Regards,
Nate