std::compare_three_way
From cppreference.com
| Defined in header <compare>
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| Defined in header <functional>
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struct compare_three_way;
|
(since C++20) | |
Function object for performing comparisons. Deduces the parameter types and the return type of the function call operator.
Nested types
| Nested type | Definition |
is_transparent
|
unspecified |
Member functions
operator() |
obtains the result of three-way comparison on both arguments (public member function) |
std::compare_three_way::operator()
template< class T, class U >
constexpr auto operator()( T&& t, U&& u ) const;
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Given the expression std::forward<T>(t) <=> std::forward<U>(u) as expr:
- If
exprresults in a call to built-inoperator<=>comparing pointers, given the composite pointer type oftanduasP:
- Compares the two converted pointers (of type
P) in the implementation-defined strict total order over pointers:
- If
tprecedesu, returns std::strong_ordering::less. - If
uprecedest, returns std::strong_ordering::greater. - Otherwise, returns std::strong_ordering::equal.
- If
- If the conversion sequence from
TtoPor the conversion sequence fromUtoPis not equality-preserving, the behavior is undefined.
- Compares the two converted pointers (of type
- Otherwise:
- Returns the result of
expr. - If
std::three_way_comparable_with<T, U>is not modeled, the behavior is undefined.
- Returns the result of
This overload participates in overload resolution only if std::three_way_comparable_with<T, U> is satisfied.
Example
Run this code
#include <compare>
#include <iostream>
struct Rational
{
int num;
int den; // > 0
// Although the comparison X <=> Y will work, a direct call
// to std::compare_three_way{}(X, Y) requires the operator==
// be defined, to satisfy the std::three_way_comparable_with.
constexpr bool operator==(Rational const&) const = default;
};
constexpr std::weak_ordering operator<=>(Rational lhs, Rational rhs)
{
return lhs.num * rhs.den <=> rhs.num * lhs.den;
}
void print(std::weak_ordering value)
{
value < 0 ? std::cout << "less\n" :
value > 0 ? std::cout << "greater\n" :
std::cout << "equal\n";
}
int main()
{
Rational a{6, 5};
Rational b{8, 7};
print(a <=> b);
print(std::compare_three_way{}(a, b));
}
Output:
greater
greater
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 3530 | C++20 | syntactic checks were relaxed while comparing pointers | only semantic requirements are relaxed |
See also
(C++20) |
constrained function object implementing x == y (class) |
(C++20) |
constrained function object implementing x != y (class) |
(C++20) |
constrained function object implementing x < y (class) |
(C++20) |
constrained function object implementing x > y (class) |
(C++20) |
constrained function object implementing x <= y (class) |
(C++20) |
constrained function object implementing x >= y (class) |