std::ranges::subrange<I,S,K>::operator PairLike
template< /* see below */ PairLike > requires pair-like-convertible-from<PairLike, const I&, const S&> |
(1) | (since C++20) |
Helper concepts |
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template< class T > concept pair-like = |
(2) | (until C++23) (exposition only*) |
(3) | ||
template< class T, class U, class V > concept pair-like-convertible-from = |
(until C++23) (exposition only*) |
|
template< class T, class U, class V > concept pair-like-convertible-from = |
(since C++23) (exposition only*) |
|
subrange
to a pair-like type (i.e. a type models the helper concept pair-like
defined below (until C++23)pair-like (since C++23)). Equivalent to return PairLike(i_, s_);, where i_
and s_
are the stored iterator and sentinel respectively.pair-like-convertible
(see below).pair-like
specifies a type is pair-like. Generally, an expression e of a pair-like type can be used for structured binding (i.e. auto const& [x, y] = e; is generally well-formed). This concept is replaced by the library-wide exposition-only concept pair-like. (since C++23)pair-like-convertible-from
refines pair-like
. It
- rejects reference types and (since C++23)
range
types, - requires that
U
andV
are convertible to the first and second element type ofT
respectively, and - requires the conversion from
U
(which will be replaced by const I&) to the first element type to be non-slicing (see convertible-to-non-slicing).
Parameters
(none)
Return value
A PairLike
value direct-initialized with the stored iterator and sentinel.
Notes
Following types in the standard library are pair-like:
- std::pair<T, U>
- std::tuple<T, U>
- std::array<T, 2>
- std::ranges::subrange<I, S, K>
A program-defined type derived from one of these types can be a pair-like type, if
|
(until C++23) |
Since subrange
specializations are range
types, conversion to them are not performed via this conversion function.
std::array specializations cannot be converted from subrange
, since they are range
types.
Example
#include <iostream> #include <ranges> #include <string> #include <utility> using striter = std::string::const_iterator; using legacy_strview = std::pair<striter, striter>; void legacy_print(legacy_strview p) { for (; p.first != p.second; ++p.first) std::cout << *p.first << ' '; std::cout << '\n'; } int main() { std::string dat{"ABCDE"}; for (auto v{ std::ranges::subrange{dat} }; v; v = {v.begin(), v.end() - 1}) { /*...*/ legacy_print(legacy_strview{v}); } }
Output:
A B C D E A B C D A B C A B A