std::nullptr_t
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <cstddef>
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using nullptr_t = decltype(nullptr); |
(since C++11) | |
std::nullptr_t
is the type of the null pointer literal, nullptr. It is a distinct type that is not itself a pointer type or a pointer to member type. Its values are null pointer constants (see NULL), and may be implicitly converted to any pointer and pointer to member type.
sizeof(std::nullptr_t) is equal to sizeof(void *).
Notes
The C++ standard requires <stddef.h> to place the contents of <cstddef> in the global namespace, and thereby requires nullptr_t
to be available in the global namespace when <stddef.h> is included.
nullptr_t
is not a part of C until C23.
Example
If two or more overloads accept different pointer types, an overload for std::nullptr_t
is necessary to accept a null pointer argument.
Run this code
#include <cstddef> #include <iostream> void f(int*) { std::cout << "Pointer to integer overload\n"; } void f(double*) { std::cout << "Pointer to double overload\n"; } void f(std::nullptr_t) { std::cout << "null pointer overload\n"; } int main() { int* pi{}; double* pd{}; f(pi); f(pd); f(nullptr); // would be ambiguous without void f(nullptr_t) // f(0); // ambiguous call: all three functions are candidates // f(NULL); // ambiguous if NULL is an integral null pointer constant // (as is the case in most implementations) }
Output:
Pointer to integer overload Pointer to double overload null pointer overload
See also
nullptr(C++11) | the pointer literal which specifies a null pointer value |
implementation-defined null pointer constant (macro constant) | |
(C++14) |
checks if a type is std::nullptr_t (class template) |