A source file (.cpp) must include its own header first.
This insures that the header is self-contained and
doesn't depend on arbitrary (and accidental) includes
before it to compile.
Furthermore, system headers should go next, followed by
C then C++ headers, then libraries (Poco, etc) and, finally,
project headers come last.
This makes sure that headers and included in the same dependency
order to avoid side-effects. For example, Poco should never rely on
anything from our project in the same way that a C header should
never rely on anything in C++, Poco, or project headers.
Also, includes ought to be sorted where possible, to improve
readability and avoid accidental duplicates (of which there
were a few).
Change-Id: I62cc1343e4a091d69195e37ed659dba20cfcb1ef
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/25262
Reviewed-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
New unittests to verify TileCache logic on the unit level.
Change-Id: Ia36181e850b349abb88ba5f04f1e5244771bacc6
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/24574
Reviewed-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Ashod Nakashian <ashnakash@gmail.com>