Document Number:N4335
Date:
Revises:N4081
Editor: Jeffrey Yasskin
Google, Inc.
jyasskin@google.com

Working Draft, C++ Extensions for Library Fundamentals

Note: this is an early draft. It’s known to be incomplet and incorrekt, and it has lots of bad formatting.

1

General

[general]
1.1

Scope

[general.scope]

This technical specification describes extensions to the C++ Standard Library (1.2). These extensions are classes and functions that are likely to be used widely within a program and/or on the interface boundaries between libraries written by different organizations.

This technical specification is non-normative. Some of the library components in this technical specification may be considered for standardization in a future version of C++, but they are not currently part of any C++ standard. Some of the components in this technical specification may never be standardized, and others may be standardized in a substantially changed form.

The goal of this technical specification is to build more widespread existing practice for an expanded C++ standard library. It gives advice on extensions to those vendors who wish to provide them.

1.2

Normative references

[general.references]

The following referenced document is indispensable for the application of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.

  • ISO/IEC 14882:—1, Programming Languages — C++

ISO/IEC 14882:— is herein called the C++ Standard. References to clauses within the C++ Standard are written as "C++14 §3.2". The library described in ISO/IEC 14882:— clauses 17–30 is herein called the C++ Standard Library.

Unless otherwise specified, the whole of the C++ Standard's Library introduction (C++14 §17) is included into this Technical Specification by reference.

1.3

Namespaces, headers, and modifications to standard classes

[general.namespaces]

Since the extensions described in this technical specification are experimental and not part of the C++ standard library, they should not be declared directly within namespace std. Unless otherwise specified, all components described in this technical specification either:

  • modify an existing interface in the C++ Standard Library in-place,
  • are declared in a namespace whose name appends ::experimental::fundamentals_v1 to a namespace defined in the C++ Standard Library, such as std or std::chrono, or
  • are declared in a subnamespace of a namespace described in the previous bullet, whose name is not the same as an existing subnamespace of namespace std.
[ Example: This TS does not define std::experimental::fundamentals_v1::chrono because the C++ Standard Library defines std::chrono. This TS does not define std::pmr::experimental::fundamentals_v1 because the C++ Standard Library does not define std::pmr. end example ]

Each header described in this technical specification shall import the contents of std::experimental::fundamentals_v1 into std::experimental as if by

namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
    inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {}
  }
}

This technical specification also describes some experimental modifications to existing interfaces in the C++ Standard Library. These modifications are described by quoting the affected parts of the standard and using underlining to represent added text and strike-through to represent deleted text.

Unless otherwise specified, references to other entities described in this technical specification are assumed to be qualified with std::experimental::fundamentals_v1::, and references to entities described in the standard are assumed to be qualified with std::.

Extensions that are expected to eventually be added to an existing header <meow> are provided inside the <experimental/meow> header, which shall include the standard contents of <meow> as if by

#include <meow>

New headers are also provided in the <experimental/> directory, but without such an #include.

1.4

Terms and definitions

[general.defns]

For the purposes of this document, the terms and definitions given in the C++ Standard and the following apply.

1.4.1 [general.defns.direct-non-list-init]
direct-non-list-initialization
A direct-initialization that is not list-initialization.
1.5

Future plans (Informative)

[general.plans]

This section describes tentative plans for future versions of this technical specification and plans for moving content into future versions of the C++ Standard.

The C++ committee intends to release a new version of this technical specification approximately every year, containing the library extensions we hope to add to a near-future version of the C++ Standard. Future versions will define their contents in std::experimental::fundamentals_v2, std::experimental::fundamentals_v3, etc., with the most recent implemented version inlined into std::experimental.

When an extension defined in this or a future version of this technical specification represents enough existing practice, it will be moved into the next version of the C++ Standard by removing the experimental::fundamentals_vN segment of its namespace and by removing the experimental/ prefix from its header's path.

1.6

Feature-testing recommendations (Informative)

[general.feature.test]

For the sake of improved portability between partial implementations of various C++ standards, WG21 (the ISO technical committee for the C++ programming language) recommends that implementers and programmers follow the guidelines in this section concerning feature-test macros. [ Note: WG21's SD-6 makes similar recommendations for the C++ Standard itself. end note ]

Implementers who provide a new standard feature should define a macro with the recommended name, in the same circumstances under which the feature is available (for example, taking into account relevant command-line options), to indicate the presence of support for that feature. Implementers should define that macro with the value specified in the most recent version of this technical specification that they have implemented. The recommended macro name is "__cpp_lib_experimental_" followed by the string in the "Macro Name Suffix" column.

Programmers who wish to determine whether a feature is available in an implementation should base that determination on the presence of the header (determined with __has_include(<header/name>)) and the state of the macro with the recommended name. (The absence of a tested feature may result in a program with decreased functionality, or the relevant functionality may be provided in a different way. A program that strictly depends on support for a feature can just try to use the feature unconditionally; presumably, on an implementation lacking necessary support, translation will fail.)

Table 2 — Significant features in this technical specification
Doc. No. Title Primary Section Macro Name Suffix Value Header
N3915 apply() call a function with arguments from a tuple 3.2.2 apply 201402 <experimental/tuple>
N3932 Variable Templates For Type Traits 3.3.1 type_trait_variable_templates 201402 <experimental/type_traits>
N3866 Invocation type traits 3.3.2 invocation_type 201406 <experimental/type_traits>
N3916 Type-erased allocator for std::function 4.2 function_erased_allocator 201406 <experimental/functional>
N3905 Extending std::search to use Additional Searching Algorithms 4.3 boyer_moore_searching 201411 <experimental/functional>
N3672, N3793 A utility class to represent optional objects 5 optional 201411 <experimental/optional>
N3804 Any Library Proposal 6 any 201411 <experimental/any>
N3921 string_view: a non-owning reference to a string 7 string_view 201411 <experimental/string_view>
N3920 Extending shared_ptr to Support Arrays 8.2 shared_ptr_arrays 201406 <experimental/memory>
N3916 Polymorphic Memory Resources 8.4 memory_resources 201402 <experimental/memory_resource>
N3916 Type-erased allocator for std::promise 9.2 promise_erased_allocator 201406 <experimental/future>
N3916 Type-erased allocator for std::packaged_task 9.3 packaged_task_erased_allocator 201406 <experimental/future>
N3925 A sample Proposal 10.3 sample 201402 <experimental/algorithm>
2

Modifications to the C++ Standard Library

[mods]

Implementations that conform to this technical specification shall behave as if the modifications contained in this section are made to the C++ Standard.

2.1

Uses-allocator construction

[mods.allocator.uses]

The following changes to the uses_allocator trait and to the description of uses-allocator construction allow a memory_resource pointer act as an allocator in many circumstances. [ Note: Existing programs that use standard allocators would be unaffected by this change. end note ]

20.7.7 uses_allocator [allocator.uses]

20.7.7.1 uses_allocator trait [allocator.uses.trait]

template <class T, class Alloc> struct uses_allocator;
Remarks:
automatically detects whether T has a nested allocator_type that is convertible from Alloc. Meets the BinaryTypeTrait requirements (C++14 §20.10.1). The implementation shall provide a definition that is derived from true_type if a type T::allocator_type exists and either is_convertible_v<Alloc, T::allocator_type> != false or T::allocator_type is an alias for std::experimental::erased_type (3.1.2), otherwise it shall be derived from false_type. A program may specialize this template to derive from true_type for a user-defined type T that does not have a nested allocator_type but nonetheless can be constructed with an allocator where either:
  • the first argument of a constructor has type allocator_arg_t and the second argument has type Alloc or
  • the last argument of a constructor has type Alloc.

20.7.7.2 uses-allocator construction [allocator.uses.construction]

Uses-allocator construction with allocator Alloc refers to the construction of an object obj of type T, using constructor arguments v1, v2, ..., vN of types V1, V2, ..., VN, respectively, and an allocator alloc of type Alloc, where Alloc either (1) meets the requirements of an allocator (C++14 §17.6.3.5), or (2) is a pointer type convertible to std::experimental::pmr::memory_resource* (8.5), according to the following rules:

3

General utilities library

[utilities]
3.1

Utility components

[utility]
3.1.1

Header <experimental/utility> synopsis

[utility.synop]
#include <utility>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  3.1.2, erased-type placeholder
  struct erased_type { };

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
3.1.2

Class erased_type

[utility.erased.type]
struct erased_type { };

The erased_type struct is an empty struct that serves as a placeholder for a type T in situations where the actual type T is determined at runtime. For example, the nested type, allocator_type, is an alias for erased_type in classes that use type-erased allocators (see 8.3).

3.2

Tuples

[tuple]
3.2.1

Header <experimental/tuple> synopsis

[header.tuple.synop]
#include <tuple>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  // See C++14 §20.4.2.5, tuple helper classes
  template <class T> constexpr size_t tuple_size_v
    = tuple_size<T>::value;

  // 3.2.2, Calling a function with a tuple of arguments
  template <class F, class Tuple>
  constexpr decltype(auto) apply(F&& f, Tuple&& t);

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
3.2.2

Calling a function with a tuple of arguments

[tuple.apply]
template <class F, class Tuple>
constexpr decltype(auto) apply(F&& f, Tuple&& t);
Effects:

Given the exposition only function

template <class F, class Tuple, size_t... I>
constexpr decltype(auto) apply_impl(  // exposition only
    F&& f, Tuple&& t, index_sequence<I...>) {
  return std::forward<F>(f)(std::get<I>(std::forward<Tuple>(t))...);
}

Equivalent to

return apply_impl(std::forward<F>(f), std::forward<Tuple>(t),
    make_index_sequence<tuple_size_v<decay_t<Tuple>>>{});
3.3

Metaprogramming and type traits

[meta]
3.3.1

Header <experimental/type_traits> synopsis

[meta.type.synop]
#include <type_traits>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  // See C++14 §20.10.4.1, primary type categories
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_void_v
    = is_void<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_null_pointer_v
    = is_null_pointer<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_integral_v
    = is_integral<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_floating_point_v
    = is_floating_point<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_array_v
    = is_array<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_pointer_v
    = is_pointer<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_lvalue_reference_v
    = is_lvalue_reference<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_rvalue_reference_v
    = is_rvalue_reference<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_member_object_pointer_v
    = is_member_object_pointer<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_member_function_pointer_v
    = is_member_function_pointer<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_enum_v
    = is_enum<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_union_v
    = is_union<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_class_v
    = is_class<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_function_v
    = is_function<T>::value;

  // See C++14 §20.10.4.2, composite type categories
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_reference_v
    = is_reference<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_arithmetic_v
    = is_arithmetic<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_fundamental_v
    = is_fundamental<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_object_v
    = is_object<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_scalar_v
    = is_scalar<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_compound_v
    = is_compound<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_member_pointer_v
    = is_member_pointer<T>::value;

  // See C++14 §20.10.4.3, type properties
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_const_v
    = is_const<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_volatile_v
    = is_volatile<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivial_v
    = is_trivial<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_copyable_v
    = is_trivially_copyable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_standard_layout_v
    = is_standard_layout<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_pod_v
    = is_pod<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_literal_type_v
    = is_literal_type<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_empty_v
    = is_empty<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_polymorphic_v
    = is_polymorphic<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_abstract_v
    = is_abstract<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_final_v
    = is_final<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_signed_v
    = is_signed<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_unsigned_v
    = is_unsigned<T>::value;
  template <class T, class... Args> constexpr bool is_constructible_v
    = is_constructible<T, Args...>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_default_constructible_v
    = is_default_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_copy_constructible_v
    = is_copy_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_move_constructible_v
    = is_move_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T, class U> constexpr bool is_assignable_v
    = is_assignable<T, U>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_copy_assignable_v
    = is_copy_assignable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_move_assignable_v
    = is_move_assignable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_destructible_v
    = is_destructible<T>::value;
  template <class T, class... Args> constexpr bool is_trivially_constructible_v
    = is_trivially_constructible<T, Args...>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_default_constructible_v
    = is_trivially_default_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_copy_constructible_v
    = is_trivially_copy_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_move_constructible_v
    = is_trivially_move_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T, class U> constexpr bool is_trivially_assignable_v
    = is_trivially_assignable<T, U>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_copy_assignable_v
    = is_trivially_copy_assignable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_move_assignable_v
    = is_trivially_move_assignable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_trivially_destructible_v
    = is_trivially_destructible<T>::value;
  template <class T, class... Args> constexpr bool is_nothrow_constructible_v
    = is_nothrow_constructible<T, Args...>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_nothrow_default_constructible_v
    = is_nothrow_default_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_nothrow_copy_constructible_v
    = is_nothrow_copy_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_nothrow_move_constructible_v
    = is_nothrow_move_constructible<T>::value;
  template <class T, class U> constexpr bool is_nothrow_assignable_v
    = is_nothrow_assignable<T, U>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_nothrow_copy_assignable_v
    = is_nothrow_copy_assignable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_nothrow_move_assignable_v
    = is_nothrow_move_assignable<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_nothrow_destructible_v
    = is_nothrow_destructible<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool has_virtual_destructor_v
    = has_virtual_destructor<T>::value;

  // See C++14 §20.10.5, type property queries
  template <class T> constexpr size_t alignment_of_v
    = alignment_of<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr size_t rank_v
    = rank<T>::value;
  template <class T, unsigned I = 0> constexpr size_t extent_v
    = extent<T, I>::value;

  // See C++14 §20.10.6, type relations
  template <class T, class U> constexpr bool is_same_v
    = is_same<T, U>::value;
  template <class Base, class Derived> constexpr bool is_base_of_v
    = is_base_of<Base, Derived>::value;
  template <class From, class To> constexpr bool is_convertible_v
    = is_convertible<From, To>::value;

  // 3.3.2, Other type transformations
  template <class> class invocation_type; // not defined
  template <class F, class... ArgTypes> class invocation_type<F(ArgTypes...)>;
  template <class> class raw_invocation_type; // not defined
  template <class F, class... ArgTypes> class raw_invocation_type<F(ArgTypes...)>;

  template <class T>
    using invocation_type_t = typename invocation_type<T>::type;
  template <class T>
    using raw_invocation_type_t = typename raw_invocation_type<T>::type;

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
3.3.2

Other type transformations

[meta.trans.other]

This sub-clause contains templates that may be used to transform one type to another following some predefined rule.

Each of the templates in this subclause shall be a TransformationTrait (C++14 §20.10.1).

Within this section, define the invocation parameters of INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ..., tN) as follows, in which T1 is the possibly cv-qualified type of t1 and U1 denotes T1& if t1 is an lvalue or T1&& if t1 is an rvalue:

  • When f is a pointer to a member function of a class T the invocation parameters are U1 followed by the parameters of f matched by t2, ..., tN.
  • When N == 1 and f is a pointer to member data of a class T the invocation parameter is U1.
  • If f is a class object, the invocation parameters are the parameters matching t1, ..., tN of the best viable function (C++14 §13.3.3) for the arguments t1, ..., tN among the function call operators of f.
  • In all other cases, the invocation parameters are the parameters of f matching t1, ... tN.

In all of the above cases, if an argument tI matches the ellipsis in the function's parameter-declaration-clause, the corresponding invocation parameter is defined to be the result of applying the default argument promotions (C++14 §5.2.2) to tI.

[ Example: Assume S is defined as
struct S {
  int f(double const &) const;
  void operator()(int, int);
  void operator()(char const *, int i = 2, int j = 3);
  void operator()(...);
};
  • The invocation parameters of INVOKE(&S::f, S(), 3.5) are (S &&, double const &).
  • The invocation parameters of INVOKE(S(), 1, 2) are (int, int).
  • The invocation parameters of INVOKE(S(), "abc", 5) are (const char *, int). The defaulted parameter j does not correspond to an argument.
  • The invocation parameters of INVOKE(S(), locale(), 5) are (locale, int). Arguments corresponding to ellipsis maintain their types
end example ]
Table 3 — Other type transformations
TemplateConditionComments
template <class Fn, class... ArgTypes>
struct raw_invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>;
Fn and all types in the parameter pack ArgTypes shall be complete types, (possibly cv-qualified) void, or arrays of unknown bound. see below
template <class Fn, class... ArgTypes>
struct invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>;
Fn and all types in the parameter pack ArgTypes shall be complete types, (possibly cv-qualified) void, or arrays of unknown bound. see below

Access checking is performed as if in a context unrelated to Fn and ArgTypes. Only the validity of the immediate context of the expression is considered. [ Note: The compilation of the expression can result in side effects such as the instantiation of class template specializations and function template specializations, the generation of implicitly-defined functions, and so on. Such side effects are not in the "immediate context" and can result in the program being ill-formed. end note ]

The nested typedef raw_invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>::type shall be defined as follows. If the expression INVOKE(declval<Fn>(), declval<ArgTypes>()...) is ill-formed when treated as an unevaluated operand (C++14 §5), there shall be no member type. Otherwise:

  • Let R denote result_of_t<Fn(ArgTypes...)>.
  • Let the types Ti be the invocation parameters of INVOKE(declval<Fn>(), declval<ArgTypes>()...).
  • Then the member typedef type shall name the function type R(T1, T2, ...).

The nested typedef invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>::type shall be defined as follows. If raw_invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>::type does not exist, there shall be no member typedef type. Otherwise:

  • Let A1, A2, … denote ArgTypes...
  • Let R(T1, T2, …) denote raw_invocation_type_t<Fn(ArgTypes...)>
  • Then the member typedef type shall name the function type R(U1, U2, …) where Ui is decay_t<Ai> if declval<Ai>() is an rvalue otherwise Ti.
3.4

Compile-time rational arithmetic

[ratio]
3.4.1

Header <experimental/ratio> synopsis

[header.ratio.synop]
#include <ratio>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  // See C++14 §20.11.5, ratio comparison
  template <class R1, class R2> constexpr bool ratio_equal_v
    = ratio_equal<R1, R2>::value;
  template <class R1, class R2> constexpr bool ratio_not_equal_v
    = ratio_not_equal<R1, R2>::value;
  template <class R1, class R2> constexpr bool ratio_less_v
    = ratio_less<R1, R2>::value;
  template <class R1, class R2> constexpr bool ratio_less_equal_v
    = ratio_less_equal<R1, R2>::value;
  template <class R1, class R2> constexpr bool ratio_greater_v
    = ratio_greater<R1, R2>::value;
  template <class R1, class R2> constexpr bool ratio_greater_equal_v
    = ratio_greater_equal<R1, R2>::value;

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
3.5

Time utilities

[time]
3.5.1

Header <experimental/chrono> synopsis

[header.chrono.synop]
#include <chrono>

namespace std {
namespace chrono {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  // See C++14 §20.12.4, customization traits
  template <class Rep> constexpr bool treat_as_floating_point_v
    = treat_as_floating_point<Rep>::value;

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace chrono
} // namespace std
3.6

System error support

[syserror]
3.6.1

Header <experimental/system_error> synopsis

[header.system_error.synop]
#include <system_error>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  // See C++14 §19.5, System error support
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_error_code_enum_v
    = is_error_code_enum<T>::value;
  template <class T> constexpr bool is_error_condition_enum_v
    = is_error_condition_enum<T>::value;

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
4

Function objects

[func]
4.1

Header <experimental/functional> synopsis

[header.functional.synop]
#include <functional>

namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    // See C++14 §20.9.9, Function object binders
    template <class T> constexpr bool is_bind_expression_v
      = is_bind_expression<T>::value;
    template <class T> constexpr int is_placeholder_v
      = is_placeholder<T>::value;

    // 4.2, Class template function
    template<class> class function; // undefined
    template<class R, class... ArgTypes> class function<R(ArgTypes...)>;

    template<class R, class... ArgTypes>
    void swap(function<R(ArgTypes...)>&, function<R(ArgTypes...)>&);

    template<class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator==(const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&, nullptr_t) noexcept;
    template<class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator==(nullptr_t, const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&) noexcept;
    template<class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator!=(const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&, nullptr_t) noexcept;
    template<class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator!=(nullptr_t, const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&) noexcept;

    // 4.3, Searchers
    template<class ForwardIterator, class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
      class default_searcher;

    template<class RandomAccessIterator,
             class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>,
             class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
      class boyer_moore_searcher;

    template<class RandomAccessIterator,
             class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>,
             class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
      class boyer_moore_horspool_searcher;


    template<class ForwardIterator, class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
    default_searcher<ForwardIterator, BinaryPredicate>
    make_default_searcher(ForwardIterator pat_first, ForwardIterator pat_last,
                          BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());

    template<class RandomAccessIterator,
             class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>,
             class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
    boyer_moore_searcher<RandomAccessIterator, Hash, BinaryPredicate>
    make_boyer_moore_searcher(
        RandomAccessIterator pat_first, RandomAccessIterator pat_last,
        Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());

    template<class RandomAccessIterator,
             class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>,
             class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
    boyer_moore_horspool_searcher<RandomAccessIterator, Hash, BinaryPredicate>
    make_boyer_moore_horspool_searcher(
        RandomAccessIterator pat_first, RandomAccessIterator pat_last,
        Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());

  } // namespace fundamentals_v1
  } // namespace experimental

  template<class R, class... ArgTypes, class Alloc>
  struct uses_allocator<experimental::function<R(ArgTypes...)>, Alloc>;

} // namespace std
4.2

Class template function

[func.wrap.func]

The specification of all declarations within this sub-clause 4.2 and its sub-clauses are the same as the corresponding declarations, as specified in C++14 §20.9.11.2, unless explicitly specified otherwise. [ Note: std::experimental::function uses std::bad_function_call, there is no additional type std::experimental::bad_function_call end note ] .

namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    template<class> class function; // undefined

    template<class R, class... ArgTypes>
    class function<R(ArgTypes...)> {
    public:
      typedef R result_type;
      typedef T1 argument_type;
      typedef T1 first_argument_type;
      typedef T2 second_argument_type;

      typedef erased_type allocator_type;

      function() noexcept;
      function(nullptr_t) noexcept;
      function(const function&);
      function(function&&);
      template<class F> function(F);
      template<class A> function(allocator_arg_t, const A&) noexcept;
      template<class A> function(allocator_arg_t, const A&,
        nullptr_t) noexcept;
      template<class A> function(allocator_arg_t, const A&,
        const function&);
      template<class A> function(allocator_arg_t, const A&,
        function&&);
      template<class F, class A> function(allocator_arg_t, const A&, F);

      function& operator=(const function&);
      function& operator=(function&&);
      function& operator=(nullptr_t) noexcept;
      template<class F> function& operator=(F&&);
      template<class F> function& operator=(reference_wrapper<F>);

      ~function();

      void swap(function&);
      template<class F, class A> void assign(F&&, const A&);

      explicit operator bool() const noexcept;

      R operator()(ArgTypes...) const;

      const type_info& target_type() const noexcept;
      template<class T> T* target() noexcept;
      template<class T> const T* target() const noexcept;

      pmr::memory_resource* get_memory_resource();
    };

    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator==(const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&, nullptr_t) noexcept;
    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator==(nullptr_t, const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&) noexcept;

    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator!=(const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&, nullptr_t) noexcept;
    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    bool operator!=(nullptr_t, const function<R(ArgTypes...)>&) noexcept;

    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    void swap(function<R(ArgTypes...)>&, function<R(ArgTypes...)>&);

  } // namespace fundamentals_v1
  } // namespace experimental

  template <class R, class... ArgTypes, class Alloc>
  struct uses_allocator<experimental::function<R(ArgTypes...)>, Alloc>
    : true_type { };

} // namespace std
4.2.1

function construct/copy/destroy

[func.wrap.func.con]

When a function constructor that takes a first argument of type allocator_arg_t is invoked, the second argument is treated as a type-erased allocator (8.3). If the constructor moves or makes a copy of a function object (C++14 §20.9), including an instance of the experimental::function class template, then that move or copy is performed by using-allocator construction with allocator get_memory_resource().

In the following descriptions, let ALLOCATOR_OF(f) be the allocator specified in the construction of function f, or allocator<char>() if no allocator was specified.

function& operator=(const function& f);
Effects:
function(allocator_arg, ALLOCATOR_OF(*this), f).swap(*this);
Returns:
*this
function& operator=(function&& f);
Effects:
function(allocator_arg, ALLOCATOR_OF(*this), std::move(f)).swap(*this);
Returns:
*this
function& operator=(nullptr_t) noexcept;
Effects:
If *this != nullptr, destroys the target of this.
Postconditions:
!(*this). The memory resource returned by get_memory_resource() after the assignment is equivalent to the memory resource before the assignment. [ Note: the address returned by get_memory_resource() might change end note ]
Returns:
*this
template<class F> function& operator=(F&& f);
Effects:
function(allocator_arg, ALLOCATOR_OF(*this), std::forward<F>(f)).swap(*this);
Returns:
*this
template<class F> function& operator=(reference_wrapper<F> f);
Effects:
function(allocator_arg, ALLOCATOR_OF(*this), f).swap(*this);
Returns:
*this
4.2.2

function modifiers

[func.wrap.func.mod]
void swap(function& other);
Requires:
this->get_memory_resource() == other->get_memory_resource().
Effects:
Interchanges the targets of *this and other.
Remarks:
The allocators of *this and other are not interchanged.
4.3

Searchers

[func.searchers]

This sub-clause provides function object types (C++14 §20.9) for operations that search for a sequence [pat_first, pat_last) in another sequence [first, last) that is provided to the object's function call operator. The first sequence (the pattern to be searched for) is provided to the object's constructor, and the second (the sequence to be searched) is provided to the function call operator.

Each specialization of a class template specified in this sub-clause 4.3 shall meet the CopyConstructible and CopyAssignable requirements. Template parameters named ForwardIterator, ForwardIterator1, ForwardIterator2, RandomAccessIterator, RandomAccessIterator1, RandomAccessIterator2, and BinaryPredicate of templates specified in this sub-clause 4.3 shall meet the same requirements and semantics as specified in C++14 §25.1. Template parameters named Hash shall meet the requirements as specified in C++14 §17.6.3.4.

The Boyer-Moore searcher implements the Boyer-Moore search algorithm. The Boyer-Moore-Horspool searcher implements the Boyer-Moore-Horspool search algorithm. In general, the Boyer-Moore searcher will use more memory and give better run-time performance than Boyer-Moore-Horspool

4.3.1

Class template default_searcher

[func.searchers.default]
template<class ForwardIterator1, class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
class default_searcher {
public:
  default_searcher(ForwardIterator1 pat_first, ForwardIterator1 pat_last,
                   BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());

  template<class ForwardIterator2>
  ForwardIterator2
  operator()(ForwardIterator2 first, ForwardIterator2 last) const;

private:
  ForwardIterator1 pat_first_; // exposition only
  ForwardIterator1 pat_last_;  // exposition only
  BinaryPredicate  pred_;      // exposition only
};
default_searcher(ForwardIterator pat_first, ForwardIterator pat_last,
BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());
Effects:
Constructs a default_searcher object, initializing pat_first_ with pat_first, pat_last_ with pat_last, and pred_ with pred.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the copy constructor of BinaryPredicate or ForwardIterator1.
template<class ForwardIterator2>
ForwardIterator2 operator()(ForwardIterator2 first, ForwardIterator2 last) const;
Effects:
Equivalent to std::search(first, last, pat_first_, pat_last_, pred_).
4.3.1.1

default_searcher creation functions

[func.searchers.default.creation]
template<class ForwardIterator, class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
default_searcher<ForwardIterator, BinaryPredicate>
make_default_searcher(ForwardIterator pat_first, ForwardIterator pat_last,
                      BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());
Effects:
Equivalent to default_searcher<ForwardIterator, BinaryPredicate>(pat_first, pat_last, pred).
4.3.2

Class template boyer_moore_searcher

[func.searchers.boyer_moore]
template<class RandomAccessIterator1,
         class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator1>::value_type>,
         class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
class boyer_moore_searcher {
public:
  boyer_moore_searcher(RandomAccessIterator1 pat_first, RandomAccessIterator1 pat_last,
                       Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());

  template<class RandomAccessIterator2>
  RandomAccessIterator2
  operator()(RandomAccessIterator2 first, RandomAccessIterator2 last) const;

private:
  RandomAccessIterator1 pat_first_; // exposition only
  RandomAccessIterator1 pat_last_;  // exposition only
  Hash                  hash_;      // exposition only
  BinaryPredicate       pred_;      // exposition only
};
boyer_moore_searcher(RandomAccessIterator1 pat_first, RandomAccessIterator1 pat_last,
Hash hf = Hash(),
BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());
Requires:
The value type of RandomAccessIterator1 shall meet the DefaultConstructible, CopyConstructible, and CopyAssignable requirements.
Requires:
For any two values A and B of the type iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator1>::value_type, if pred(A,B)==true, then hf(A)==hf(B) shall be true.
Effects:
Constructs a boyer_moore_searcher object, initializing pat_first_ with pat_first, pat_last_ with pat_last, hash_ with hf, and pred_ with pred.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the copy constructor of RandomAccessIterator1, or by the default constructor, copy constructor, or the copy assignment operator of the value type of RandomAccessIterator1, or the copy constructor or operator() of BinaryPredicate or Hash. May throw bad_alloc if additional memory needed for internal data structures cannot be allocated.
template<class RandomAccessIterator2>
RandomAccessIterator2 operator()(RandomAccessIterator2 first, RandomAccessIterator2 last) const;
Requires:
RandomAccessIterator1 and RandomAccessIterator2 shall have the same value type.
Effects:
Finds a subsequence of equal values in a sequence.
Returns:
The first iterator i in the range [first, last - (pat_last_ - pat_first_)) such that for every non-negative integer n less than pat_last_ - pat_first_ the following condition holds: pred(*(i + n), *(pat_first_ + n)) != false. Returns first if [pat_first_, pat_last_) is empty, otherwise returns last if no such iterator is found.
Complexity:
At most (last - first) * (pat_last_ - pat_first_) applications of the predicate.
4.3.2.1

boyer_moore_searcher creation functions

[func.searchers.boyer_moore.creation]
template<class RandomAccessIterator,
class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>,
class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
  boyer_moore_searcher<RandomAccessIterator, Hash, BinaryPredicate>
  make_boyer_moore_searcher(RandomAccessIterator pat_first, RandomAccessIterator pat_last,
                            Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());
Effects:
Equivalent to boyer_moore_searcher<RandomAccessIterator, Hash, BinaryPredicate>(pat_first, pat_last, hf, pred).
4.3.3

Class template boyer_moore_horspool_searcher

[func.searchers.boyer_moore_horspool]

template<class RandomAccessIterator1,
         class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator1>::value_type>,
         class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
class boyer_moore_horspool_searcher {
public:
  boyer_moore_horspool_searcher(RandomAccessIterator1 pat_first, RandomAccessIterator1 pat_last,
                                Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());

  template<class RandomAccessIterator2>
  RandomAccessIterator2
  operator()(RandomAccessIterator2 first, RandomAccessIterator2 last) const;

private:
  RandomAccessIterator1 pat_first_; // exposition only
  RandomAccessIterator1 pat_last_;  // exposition only
  Hash                  hash_;      // exposition only
  BinaryPredicate       pred_;      // exposition only
};
boyer_moore_horspool_searcher(
RandomAccessIterator1 pat_first, RandomAccessIterator1 pat_last,
Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());
Requires:
The value type of RandomAccessIterator1 shall meet the DefaultConstructible, CopyConstructible, and CopyAssignable requirements.
Requires:
For any two values A and B of the type iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator1>::value_type, if pred(A,B)==true, then hf(A)==hf(B) shall be true.
Effects:
Constructs a boyer_moore_horspool_searcher object, initializing pat_first_ with pat_first, pat_last_ with pat_last, hash_ with hf, and pred_ with pred.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the copy constructor of RandomAccessIterator1, or by the default constructor, copy constructor, or the copy assignment operator of the value type of RandomAccessIterator1 or the copy constructor or operator() of BinaryPredicate or Hash. May throw bad_alloc if the system cannot allocate additional memory for internal data structures needed.
template<class RandomAccessIterator2>
RandomAccessIterator2 operator()(RandomAccessIterator2 first, RandomAccessIterator2 last) const;
Requires:
RandomAccessIterator1 and RandomAccessIterator2 shall have the same value type.
Effects:
Finds a subsequence of equal values in a sequence.
Returns:
The first iterator i in the range [first, last - (pat_last_ - pat_first_)) such that for every non-negative integer n less than pat_last_ - pat_first_ the following condition holds: pred(*(i + n), *(pat_first_ + n)) != false. Returns first if [pat_first_, pat_last_) is empty, otherwise returns last if no such iterator is found.
Complexity:
At most (last - first) * (pat_last_ - pat_first_) applications of the predicate.
4.3.3.1

boyer_moore_horspool_searcher creation functions

[func.searchers.boyer_moore_horspool.creation]
template<class RandomAccessIterator,
         class Hash = hash<typename iterator_traits<RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>,
         class BinaryPredicate = equal_to<>>
boyer_moore_searcher_horspool<RandomAccessIterator, Hash, BinaryPredicate>
make_boyer_moore_horspool_searcher(
    RandomAccessIterator pat_first, RandomAccessIterator pat_last,
    Hash hf = Hash(), BinaryPredicate pred = BinaryPredicate());
Effects:
Equivalent to boyer_moore_horspool_searcher<RandomAccessIterator, Hash, BinaryPredicate>(pat_first, pat_last, hf, pred).
5

Optional objects

[optional]
5.1

In general

[optional.general]

This subclause describes class template optional that represents optional objects. An optional object for object types is an object that contains the storage for another object and manages the lifetime of this contained object, if any. The contained object may be initialized after the optional object has been initialized, and may be destroyed before the optional object has been destroyed. The initialization state of the contained object is tracked by the optional object.

5.2

Header <experimental/optional> synopsis

[optional.synop]
namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    // 5.3, optional for object types
    template <class T> class optional;

    // 5.4, In-place construction
    struct in_place_t{};
    constexpr in_place_t in_place{};

    // 5.5, No-value state indicator
    struct nullopt_t{see below};
    constexpr nullopt_t nullopt(unspecified);

    // 5.6, Class bad_optional_access
    class bad_optional_access;

    // 5.7, Relational operators
    template <class T>
      constexpr bool operator==(const optional<T>&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T>
      constexpr bool operator!=(const optional<T>&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T>
      constexpr bool operator<(const optional<T>&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T>
      constexpr bool operator>(const optional<T>&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T>
      constexpr bool operator<=(const optional<T>&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T>
      constexpr bool operator>=(const optional<T>&, const optional<T>&);

    // 5.8, Comparison with nullopt
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const optional<T>&, nullopt_t) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(nullopt_t, const optional<T>&) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const optional<T>&, nullopt_t) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(nullopt_t, const optional<T>&) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const optional<T>&, nullopt_t) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(nullopt_t, const optional<T>&) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const optional<T>&, nullopt_t) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(nullopt_t, const optional<T>&) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const optional<T>&, nullopt_t) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(nullopt_t, const optional<T>&) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const optional<T>&, nullopt_t) noexcept;
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(nullopt_t, const optional<T>&) noexcept;

    // 5.9, Comparison with T
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const optional<T>&, const T&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const T&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const optional<T>&, const T&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const T&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const optional<T>&, const T&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const T&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const optional<T>&, const T&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const T&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const optional<T>&, const T&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const T&, const optional<T>&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const optional<T>&, const T&);
    template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const T&, const optional<T>&);

    // 5.10, Specialized algorithms
    template <class T> void swap(optional<T>&, optional<T>&) noexcept(see below);
    template <class T> constexpr optional<see below> make_optional(T&&);

  } // namespace fundamentals_v1
  } // namespace experimental

  // 5.11, Hash support
  template <class T> struct hash;
  template <class T> struct hash<experimental::optional<T>>;

} // namespace std

A program that necessitates the instantiation of template optional for a reference type, or for possibly cv-qualified types in_place_t or nullopt_t is ill-formed.

5.3

optional for object types

[optional.object]
template <class T>
class optional
{
public:
  typedef T value_type;

  // 5.3.1, Constructors
  constexpr optional() noexcept;
  constexpr optional(nullopt_t) noexcept;
  optional(const optional&);
  optional(optional&&) noexcept(see below);
  constexpr optional(const T&);
  constexpr optional(T&&);
  template <class... Args> constexpr explicit optional(in_place_t, Args&&...);
  template <class U, class... Args>
    constexpr explicit optional(in_place_t, initializer_list<U>, Args&&...);

  // 5.3.2, Destructor
  ~optional();

  // 5.3.3, Assignment
  optional& operator=(nullopt_t) noexcept;
  optional& operator=(const optional&);
  optional& operator=(optional&&) noexcept(see below);
  template <class U> optional& operator=(U&&);
  template <class... Args> void emplace(Args&&...);
  template <class U, class... Args>
    void emplace(initializer_list<U>, Args&&...);

  // 5.3.4, Swap
  void swap(optional&) noexcept(see below);

  // 5.3.5, Observers
  constexpr T const* operator ->() const;
  constexpr T* operator ->();
  constexpr T const& operator *() const &;
  constexpr T& operator *() &;
  constexpr T&& operator *() &&;
  constexpr const T&& operator *() const &&;
  constexpr explicit operator bool() const noexcept;
  constexpr T const& value() const &;
  constexpr T& value() &;
  constexpr T&& value() &&;
  constexpr const T&& value() const &&;
  template <class U> constexpr T value_or(U&&) const &;
  template <class U> constexpr T value_or(U&&) &&;

private:
  T*   val;  // exposition only
};

Any instance of optional<T> at any given time either contains a value or does not contain a value. When an instance of optional<T> contains a value, it means that an object of type T, referred to as the optional object's contained value, is allocated within the storage of the optional object. Implementations are not permitted to use additional storage, such as dynamic memory, to allocate its contained value. The contained value shall be allocated in a region of the optional<T> storage suitably aligned for the type T. When an object of type optional<T> is contextually converted to bool, the conversion returns true if the object contains a value; otherwise the conversion returns false.

Member val is provided for exposition only. When an optional<T> object contains a value, val points to the contained value.

T shall be an object type and shall satisfy the requirements of Destructible (Table 24).

5.3.1

Constructors

[optional.object.ctor]
constexpr optional() noexcept;constexpr optional(nullopt_t) noexcept;
Postconditions:
*this does not contain a value.
Remarks:
No contained value is initialized. For every object type T these constructors shall be constexpr constructors (C++14 §7.1.5).
optional(const optional<T>& rhs);
Requires:
is_copy_constructible_v<T> is true.
Effects:
If rhs contains a value, initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the expression *rhs.
Postconditions:
bool(rhs) == bool(*this).
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
optional(optional<T>&& rhs) noexcept(see below);
Requires:
is_move_constructible_v<T> is true.
Effects:
If rhs contains a value, initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the expression std::move(*rhs). bool(rhs) is unchanged.
Postconditions:
bool(rhs) == bool(*this).
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:
The expression inside noexcept is equivalent to:
is_nothrow_move_constructible_v<T>
constexpr optional(const T& v);
Requires:
is_copy_constructible_v<T> is true.
Effects:
Initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the expression v.
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:
If T's selected constructor is a constexpr constructor, this constructor shall be a constexpr constructor.
constexpr optional(T&& v);
Requires:
is_move_constructible_v<T> is true.
Effects:
Initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the expression std::move(v).
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:
If T's selected constructor is a constexpr constructor, this constructor shall be a constexpr constructor.
template <class... Args> constexpr explicit optional(in_place_t, Args&&... args);
Requires:
is_constructible_v<T, Args&&...> is true.
Effects:
Initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the arguments std::forward<Args>(args)....
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:
If T's constructor selected for the initialization is a constexpr constructor, this constructor shall be a constexpr constructor.
template <class U, class... Args>
constexpr explicit optional(in_place_t, initializer_list<U> il, Args&&... args);
Requires:
is_constructible_v<T, initializer_list<U>&, Args&&...> is true.
Effects:
Initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the arguments il, std::forward<Args>(args)....
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:
The function shall not participate in overload resolution unless is_constructible_v<T, initializer_list<U>&, Args&&...> is true. If T's constructor selected for the initialization is a constexpr constructor, this constructor shall be a constexpr constructor.
5.3.2

Destructor

[optional.object.dtor]
~optional();
Effects:
If is_trivially_destructible_v<T> != true and *this contains a value, calls val->T::~T().
Remarks:
If is_trivially_destructible_v<T> == true then this destructor shall be a trivial destructor.
5.3.3

Assignment

[optional.object.assign]
optional<T>& operator=(nullopt_t) noexcept;
Effects:
If *this contains a value, calls val->T::~T() to destroy the contained value; otherwise no effect.
Returns:
*this.
Postconditions:
*this does not contain a value.
optional<T>& operator=(const optional<T>& rhs);
Requires:
is_copy_constructible_v<T> is true and is_copy_assignable_v<T> is true.
Effects:
Table 4 — optional::operator=(const optional&) effects
*this contains a value *this does not contain a value
rhs contains a value assigns *rhs to the contained value initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with *rhs
rhs does not contain a value destroys the contained value by calling val->T::~T() no effect
Returns:
*this.
Postconditions:
bool(rhs) == bool(*this).
Remarks:
If any exception is thrown, the result of the expression bool(*this) remains unchanged. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's copy constructor, no effect. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's copy assignment, the state of its contained value is as defined by the exception safety guarantee of T's copy assignment.
optional<T>& operator=(optional<T>&& rhs) noexcept(see below);
Requires:
is_move_constructible_v<T> is true and is_move_assignable_v<T> is true.
Effects:
The result of the expression bool(rhs) remains unchanged.
Table 5 — optional::operator=(optional&&) effects
*this contains a value *this does not contain a value
rhs contains a value assigns std::move(*rhs) to the contained value initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with std::move(*rhs)
rhs does not contain a value destroys the contained value by calling val->T::~T() no effect
Returns:
*this.
Postconditions:
bool(rhs) == bool(*this).
Remarks:

The expression inside noexcept is equivalent to:

is_nothrow_move_assignable_v<T> && is_nothrow_move_constructible_v<T>

If any exception is thrown, the result of the expression bool(*this) remains unchanged. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's move constructor, the state of *rhs.val is determined by the exception safety guarantee of T's move constructor. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's move assignment, the state of *val and *rhs.val is determined by the exception safety guarantee of T's move assignment.

template <class U> optional<T>& operator=(U&& v);
Requires:
is_constructible_v<T, U> is true and is_assignable_v<T&, U> is true.
Effects:
If *this contains a value, assigns std::forward<U>(v) to the contained value; otherwise initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing object of type T with std::forward<U>(v).
Returns:
*this.
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Remarks:

If any exception is thrown, the result of the expression bool(*this) remains unchanged. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's constructor, the state of v is determined by the exception safety guarantee of T's constructor. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's assignment, the state of *val and v is determined by the exception safety guarantee of T's assignment.

The function shall not participate in overload resolution unless is_same_v<decay_t<U>, T> is true.

Notes:
The reason for providing such generic assignment and then constraining it so that effectively T == U is to guarantee that assignment of the form o = {} is unambiguous.
template <class... Args> void emplace(Args&&... args);
Requires:
is_constructible_v<T, Args&&...> is true.
Effects:
Calls *this = nullopt. Then initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the arguments std::forward<Args>(args)....
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:
If an exception is thrown during the call to T's constructor, *this does not contain a value, and the previous *val (if any) has been destroyed.
template <class U, class... Args> void emplace(initializer_list<U> il, Args&&... args);
Effects:
Calls *this = nullopt. Then initializes the contained value as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the arguments il, std::forward<Args>(args)....
Postconditions:
*this contains a value.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
Remarks:

If an exception is thrown during the call to T's constructor, *this does not contain a value, and the previous *val (if any) has been destroyed.

The function shall not participate in overload resolution unless is_constructible_v<T, initializer_list<U>&, Args&&...> is true.

5.3.4

Swap

[optional.object.swap]
void swap(optional<T>& rhs) noexcept(see below);
Requires:
Lvalues of type T shall be swappable and is_move_constructible_v<T> is true.
Effects:
Table 6 — optional::swap(optional&) effects
*this contains a value *this does not contain a value
rhs contains a value calls swap(*(*this), *rhs) initializes the contained value of *this as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the expression std::move(*rhs), followed by rhs.val->T::~T(); postcondition is that *this contains a value and rhs does not contain a value
rhs does not contain a value initializes the contained value of rhs as if direct-non-list-initializing an object of type T with the expression std::move(*(*this)), followed by val->T::~T(); postcondition is that *this does not contain a value and rhs contains a value no effect
Throws:
Any exceptions that the expressions in the Effects element throw.
Remarks:

The expression inside noexcept is equivalent to:

is_nothrow_move_constructible_v<T> && noexcept(swap(declval<T&>(), declval<T&>()))

If any exception is thrown, the results of the expressions bool(*this) and bool(rhs) remain unchanged. If an exception is thrown during the call to function swap the state of *val and *rhs.val is determined by the exception safety guarantee of swap for lvalues of T. If an exception is thrown during the call to T's move constructor, the state of *val and *rhs.val is determined by the exception safety guarantee of T's move constructor.

5.3.5

Observers

[optional.object.observe]
constexpr T const* operator->() const;constexpr T* operator->();
Requires:
*this contains a value.
Returns:
val.
Throws:
Nothing.
Remarks:
Unless T is a user-defined type with overloaded unary operator&, these functions shall be constexpr functions.
constexpr T const& operator*() const &;constexpr T& operator*() &;
Requires:
*this contains a value.
Returns:
*val.
Throws:
Nothing.
Remarks:
These functions shall be constexpr functions.
constexpr T&& operator*() &&;constexpr const T&& operator*() const &&;
Requires:
*this contains a value
Effects:
Equivalent to return std::move(*val);
constexpr explicit operator bool() const noexcept;
Returns:
true if and only if *this contains a value.
Remarks:
This function shall be a constexpr function.
constexpr T const& value() const &;constexpr T& value() &;
Effects:
Equivalent to return bool(*this) ? *val : throw bad_optional_access();
constexpr T&& value() &&;constexpr const T&& value() const &&;
Effects:
Equivalent to return bool(*this) ? std::move(*val) : throw bad_optional_access();
template <class U> constexpr T value_or(U&& v) const &;
Effects:
Equivalent to return bool(*this) ? **this : static_cast<T>(std::forward<U>(v)).
Remarks:
If is_copy_constructible_v<T> && is_convertible_v<U&&, T> is false, the program is ill-formed.
template <class U> T value_or(U&& v) &&;
Effects:
Equivalent to return bool(*this) ? std::move(**this) : static_cast<T>(std::forward<U>(v)).
Remarks:
If is_move_constructible_v<T> && is_convertible_v<U&&, T> is false, the program is ill-formed.
5.4

In-place construction

[optional.inplace]
struct in_place_t{};constexpr in_place_t in_place{};

The struct in_place_t is an empty structure type used as a unique type to disambiguate constructor and function overloading. Specifically, optional<T> has a constructor with in_place_t as the first parameter followed by a parameter pack; this indicates that T should be constructed in-place (as if by a call to a placement new expression) with the forwarded pack expansion as arguments for the initialization of T.

5.5

No-value state indicator

[optional.nullopt]
struct nullopt_t{see below};constexpr nullopt_t nullopt(unspecified);

The struct nullopt_t is an empty structure type used as a unique type to indicate the state of not containing a value for optional objects. In particular, optional<T> has a constructor with nullopt_t as a single argument; this indicates that an optional object not containing a value shall be constructed.

Type nullopt_t shall not have a default constructor. It shall be a literal type. Constant nullopt shall be initialized with an argument of literal type.

5.6

Class bad_optional_access

[optional.bad_optional_access]
class bad_optional_access : public logic_error {
public:
  bad_optional_access();
};

The class bad_optional_access defines the type of objects thrown as exceptions to report the situation where an attempt is made to access the value of an optional object that does not contain a value.

bad_optional_access();
Effects:
Constructs an object of class bad_optional_access.
Postconditions:
what() returns an implementation-defined NTBS.
5.7

Relational operators

[optional.relops]
template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const optional<T>& x, const optional<T>& y);
Requires:
T shall meet the requirements of EqualityComparable.
Returns:
If bool(x) != bool(y), false; otherwise if bool(x) == false, true; otherwise *x == *y.
Remarks:
Specializations of this function template, for which *x == *y is a core constant expression, shall be constexpr functions.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const optional<T>& x, const optional<T>& y);
Returns:
!(x == y).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const optional<T>& x, const optional<T>& y);
Requires:
*x < *y shall be well-formed and its result shall be convertible to bool.
Returns:
If !y, false; otherwise, if !x, true; otherwise *x < *y.
Remarks:
Specializations of this function template, for which *x < *y is a core constant expression, shall be constexpr functions.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const optional<T>& x, const optional<T>& y);
Returns:
y < x.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const optional<T>& x, const optional<T>& y);
Returns:
!(y < x).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const optional<T>& x, const optional<T>& y);
Returns:
!(x < y).
5.8

Comparison with nullopt

[optional.nullops]
template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const optional<T>& x, nullopt_t) noexcept;template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(nullopt_t, const optional<T>& x) noexcept;
Returns:
!x.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const optional<T>& x, nullopt_t) noexcept;template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(nullopt_t, const optional<T>& x) noexcept;
Returns:
bool(x).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const optional<T>& x, nullopt_t) noexcept;
Returns:
false.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(nullopt_t, const optional<T>& x) noexcept;
Returns:
bool(x).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const optional<T>& x, nullopt_t) noexcept;
Returns:
!x.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(nullopt_t, const optional<T>& x) noexcept;
Returns:
true.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const optional<T>& x, nullopt_t) noexcept;
Returns:
bool(x).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(nullopt_t, const optional<T>& x) noexcept;
Returns:
false.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const optional<T>& x, nullopt_t) noexcept;
Returns:
true.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(nullopt_t, const optional<T>& x) noexcept;
Returns:
!x.
5.9

Comparison with T

[optional.comp_with_t]
template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const optional<T>& x, const T& v);
Returns:
bool(x) ? *x == v : false.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator==(const T& v, const optional<T>& x);
Returns:
bool(x) ? v == *x : false.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const optional<T>& x, const T& v);
Returns:
bool(x) ? !(*x == v) : true.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator!=(const T& v, const optional<T>& x);
Returns:
bool(x) ? !(v == *x) : true.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const optional<T>& x, const T& v);
Returns:
bool(x) ? *x < v : true.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<(const T& v, const optional<T>& x);
Returns:
bool(x) ? v < *x : false.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const T& v, const optional<T>& x);
Returns:
bool(x) ? *x < v : true.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>(const optional<T>& x, const T& v);
Returns:
bool(x) ? v < *x : false.
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const optional<T>& x, const T& v);
Returns:
!(x < v).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator>=(const T& v, const optional<T>& x);
Returns:
!(v < x).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const optional<T>& x, const T& v);
Returns:
!(x > v).
template <class T> constexpr bool operator<=(const T& v, const optional<T>& x);
Returns:
!(v > x).
5.10

Specialized algorithms

[optional.specalg]
template <class T> void swap(optional<T>& x, optional<T>& y) noexcept(noexcept(x.swap(y)));
Effects:
Calls x.swap(y).
template <class T> constexpr optional<decay_t<T>> make_optional(T&& v);
Returns:
optional<decay_t<T>>(std::forward<T>(v)).
5.11

Hash support

[optional.hash]
template <class T> struct hash<experimental::optional<T>>;
Requires:
The template specialization hash<T> shall meet the requirements of class template hash (C++14 §20.9.12). The template specialization hash<optional<T>> shall meet the requirements of class template hash. For an object o of type optional<T>, if bool(o) == true, hash<optional<T>>()(o) shall evaluate to the same value as hash<T>()(*o); otherwise it evaluates to an unspecified value.
6

Class any

[any]

This section describes components that C++ programs may use to perform operations on objects of a discriminated type.

[ Note: The discriminated type may contain values of different types but does not attempt conversion between them, i.e. 5 is held strictly as an int and is not implicitly convertible either to "5" or to 5.0. This indifference to interpretation but awareness of type effectively allows safe, generic containers of single values, with no scope for surprises from ambiguous conversions. end note ]

6.1

Header <experimental/any> synopsis

[any.synop]
namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  class bad_any_cast : public bad_cast
  {
  public:
    virtual const char* what() const noexcept;
  };

  class any
  {
  public:
    // 6.3.1, any construct/destruct
    any() noexcept;

    any(const any& other);
    any(any&& other) noexcept;

    template <class ValueType>
      any(ValueType&& value);

    ~any();

    // 6.3.2, any assignments
    any& operator=(const any& rhs);
    any& operator=(any&& rhs) noexcept;

    template <class ValueType>
      any& operator=(ValueType&& rhs);

    // 6.3.3, any modifiers
    void clear() noexcept;
    void swap(any& rhs) noexcept;

    // 6.3.4, any observers
    bool empty() const noexcept;
    const type_info& type() const noexcept;
  };

  // 6.4, Non-member functions
  void swap(any& x, any& y) noexcept;

  template<class ValueType>
    ValueType any_cast(const any& operand);
  template<class ValueType>
    ValueType any_cast(any& operand);
  template<class ValueType>
    ValueType any_cast(any&& operand);

  template<class ValueType>
    const ValueType* any_cast(const any* operand) noexcept;
  template<class ValueType>
    ValueType* any_cast(any* operand) noexcept;

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
6.2

Class bad_any_cast

[any.bad_any_cast]

Objects of type bad_any_cast are thrown by a failed any_cast.

6.3

Class any

[any.class]

An object of class any stores an instance of any type that satisfies the constructor requirements or is empty, and this is referred to as the state of the class any object. The stored instance is called the contained object. Two states are equivalent if they are either both empty or if both are not empty and if the contained objects are equivalent.

The non-member any_cast functions provide type-safe access to the contained object.

Implementations should avoid the use of dynamically allocated memory for a small contained object. [ Example: where the object constructed is holding only an int. end example ] Such small-object optimization shall only be applied to types T for which is_nothrow_move_constructible_v<T> is true.

6.3.1

any construct/destruct

[any.cons]
any() noexcept;
Postconditions:
this->empty()
any(const any& other);
Effects:
Constructs an object of type any with an equivalent state as other.
Throws:
Any exceptions arising from calling the selected constructor of the contained object.
any(any&& other) noexcept;
Effects:
Constructs an object of type any with a state equivalent to the original state of other.
Postconditions:
other is left in a valid but otherwise unspecified state.
template<class ValueType>
any(ValueType&& value);

Let T be equal to decay_t<ValueType>.

Requires:
T shall satisfy the CopyConstructible requirements. If is_copy_constructible_v<T> is false, the program is ill-formed.
Effects:
Constructs an object of type any that contains an object of type T direct-initialized with std::forward<ValueType>(value).
Remarks:
This constructor shall not participate in overload resolution if decay_t<ValueType> is the same type as any.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
~any();
Effects:
clear().
6.3.2

any assignments

[any.assign]
any& operator=(const any& rhs);
Effects:
any(rhs).swap(*this). No effects if an exception is thrown.
Returns:
*this
Throws:
Any exceptions arising from the copy constructor of the contained object.
any& operator=(any&& rhs) noexcept;
Effects:
any(std::move(rhs)).swap(*this).
Returns:
*this
Postconditions:
The state of *this is equivalent to the original state of rhs and rhs is left in a valid but otherwise unspecified state.
template<class ValueType>
any& operator=(ValueType&& rhs);

Let T be equal to decay_t<ValueType>.

Requires:
T shall satisfy the CopyConstructible requirements. If is_copy_constructible_v<T> is false, the program is ill-formed.
Effects:
Constructs an object tmp of type any that contains an object of type T direct-initialized with std::forward<ValueType>(rhs), and tmp.swap(*this). No effects if an exception is thrown.
Returns:
*this
Remarks:
This operator shall not participate in overload resolution if decay_t<ValueType> is the same type as any.
Throws:
Any exception thrown by the selected constructor of T.
6.3.3

any modifiers

[any.modifiers]
void clear() noexcept;
Effects:
If not empty, destroys the contained object.
Postconditions:
empty() == true.
void swap(any& rhs) noexcept;
Effects:
Exchange the states of *this and rhs.
6.3.4

any observers

[any.observers]
bool empty() const noexcept;
Returns:
true if *this has no contained object, otherwise false.
const type_info& type() const noexcept;
Returns:
If *this has a contained object of type T, typeid(T); otherwise typeid(void).

[ Note: Useful for querying against types known either at compile time or only at runtime. end note ]

6.4

Non-member functions

[any.nonmembers]
void swap(any& x, any& y) noexcept;
Effects:
x.swap(y).
template<class ValueType>
ValueType any_cast(const any& operand);template<class ValueType>
ValueType any_cast(any& operand);template<class ValueType>
ValueType any_cast(any&& operand);
Requires:
is_reference_v<ValueType> is true or is_copy_constructible_v<ValueType> is true. Otherwise the program is ill-formed.
Returns:
For the first form, *any_cast<add_const_t<remove_reference_t<ValueType>>>(&operand). For the second and third forms, *any_cast<remove_reference_t<ValueType>>(&operand).
Throws:
bad_any_cast if operand.type() != typeid(remove_reference_t<ValueType>).
[ Example:
any x(5);                                   // x holds int
assert(any_cast<int>(x) == 5);              // cast to value
any_cast<int&>(x) = 10;                     // cast to reference
assert(any_cast<int>(x) == 10);

x = "Meow";                                 // x holds const char*
assert(strcmp(any_cast<const char*>(x), "Meow") == 0);
any_cast<const char*&>(x) = "Harry";
assert(strcmp(any_cast<const char*>(x), "Harry") == 0);

x = string("Meow");                         // x holds string
string s, s2("Jane");
s = move(any_cast<string&>(x));             // move from any
assert(s == "Meow");
any_cast<string&>(x) = move(s2);            // move to any
assert(any_cast<const string&>(x) == "Jane");

string cat("Meow");
const any y(cat);                           // const y holds string
assert(any_cast<const string&>(y) == cat);

any_cast<string&>(y);                       // error; cannot
                                            //  any_cast away const
end example ]
template<class ValueType>
const ValueType* any_cast(const any* operand) noexcept;template<class ValueType>
ValueType* any_cast(any* operand) noexcept;
Returns:
If operand != nullptr && operand->type() == typeid(ValueType), a pointer to the object contained by operand, otherwise nullptr.
[ Example:
bool is_string(const any& operand) {
  return any_cast<string>(&operand) != nullptr;
}
end example ]
7

string_view

[string.view]

The class template basic_string_view describes an object that can refer to a constant contiguous sequence of char-like (C++14 §21.1) objects with the first element of the sequence at position zero. In the rest of this section, the type of the char-like objects held in a basic_string_view object is designated by charT.

[ Note: The library provides implicit conversions from const charT* and std::basic_string<charT, ...> to std::basic_string_view<charT, ...> so that user code can accept just std::basic_string_view<charT> as a non-templated parameter wherever a sequence of characters is expected. User-defined types should define their own implicit conversions to std::basic_string_view in order to interoperate with these functions. end note ]

The complexity of basic_string_view member functions is O(1) unless otherwise specified.

7.1

Header <experimental/string_view> synopsis

[string.view.synop]
namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    // 7.2, Class template basic_string_view
    template<class charT, class traits = char_traits<charT>>
        class basic_string_view;

    // 7.9, basic_string_view non-member comparison functions
    template<class charT, class traits>
    constexpr bool operator==(basic_string_view<charT, traits> x,
                              basic_string_view<charT, traits> y) noexcept;
    template<class charT, class traits>
    constexpr bool operator!=(basic_string_view<charT, traits> x,
                              basic_string_view<charT, traits> y) noexcept;
    template<class charT, class traits>
    constexpr bool operator< (basic_string_view<charT, traits> x,
                                 basic_string_view<charT, traits> y) noexcept;
    template<class charT, class traits>
    constexpr bool operator> (basic_string_view<charT, traits> x,
                              basic_string_view<charT, traits> y) noexcept;
    template<class charT, class traits>
    constexpr bool operator<=(basic_string_view<charT, traits> x,
                                 basic_string_view<charT, traits> y) noexcept;
    template<class charT, class traits>
    constexpr bool operator>=(basic_string_view<charT, traits> x,
                              basic_string_view<charT, traits> y) noexcept;
    // see below, sufficient additional overloads of comparison functions

    // 7.10, Inserters and extractors
    template<class charT, class traits>
      basic_ostream<charT, traits>&
        operator<<(basic_ostream<charT, traits>& os,
                   basic_string_view<charT, traits> str);

    // basic_string_view typedef names
    typedef basic_string_view<char> string_view;
    typedef basic_string_view<char16_t> u16string_view;
    typedef basic_string_view<char32_t> u32string_view;
    typedef basic_string_view<wchar_t> wstring_view;

  }  // namespace fundamentals_v1
  }  // namespace experimental

  // 7.11, Hash support
  template <class T> struct hash;
  template <> struct hash<experimental::string_view>;
  template <> struct hash<experimental::u16string_view>;
  template <> struct hash<experimental::u32string_view>;
  template <> struct hash<experimental::wstring_view>;

}  // namespace std

The function templates defined in C++14 §20.2.2 and C++14 §24.7 are available when <experimental/string_view> is included.

7.2

Class template basic_string_view

[string.view.template]
template<class charT, class traits = char_traits<charT>>
class basic_string_view {
  public:
  // types
  typedef traits traits_type;
  typedef charT value_type;
  typedef charT* pointer;
  typedef const charT* const_pointer;
  typedef charT& reference;
  typedef const charT& const_reference;
  typedef implementation-defined const_iterator; // See 7.4
  typedef const_iterator iterator;2
  typedef reverse_iterator<const_iterator> const_reverse_iterator;
  typedef const_reverse_iterator reverse_iterator;
  typedef size_t size_type;
  typedef ptrdiff_t difference_type;
  static constexpr size_type npos = size_type(-1);

  // 7.3, basic_string_view constructors and assignment operators
  constexpr basic_string_view() noexcept;
  constexpr basic_string_view(const basic_string_view&) noexcept = default;
  basic_string_view& operator=(const basic_string_view&) noexcept = default;
  template<class Allocator>
  basic_string_view(const basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator>& str) noexcept;
  constexpr basic_string_view(const charT* str);
  constexpr basic_string_view(const charT* str, size_type len);

  // 7.4, basic_string_view iterator support
  constexpr const_iterator begin() const noexcept;
  constexpr const_iterator end() const noexcept;
  constexpr const_iterator cbegin() const noexcept;
  constexpr const_iterator cend() const noexcept;
  const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const noexcept;
  const_reverse_iterator rend() const noexcept;
  const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const noexcept;
  const_reverse_iterator crend() const noexcept;

  // 7.5, basic_string_view capacity
  constexpr size_type size() const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type length() const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type max_size() const noexcept;
  constexpr bool empty() const noexcept;

  // 7.6, basic_string_view element access
  constexpr const_reference operator[](size_type pos) const;
  constexpr const_reference at(size_type pos) const;
  constexpr const_reference front() const;
  constexpr const_reference back() const;
  constexpr const_pointer data() const noexcept;

  // 7.7, basic_string_view modifiers
  constexpr void remove_prefix(size_type n);
  constexpr void remove_suffix(size_type n);
  constexpr void swap(basic_string_view& s) noexcept;

  // 7.8, basic_string_view string operations
  template<class Allocator>
  explicit operator basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator>() const;
  template<class Allocator = allocator<charT> >
  basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator> to_string(
    const Allocator& a = Allocator()) const;

  size_type copy(charT* s, size_type n, size_type pos = 0) const;

  constexpr basic_string_view substr(size_type pos = 0, size_type n = npos) const;
  constexpr int compare(basic_string_view s) const noexcept;
  constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1, basic_string_view s) const;
  constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1,
                        basic_string_view s, size_type pos2, size_type n2) const;
  constexpr int compare(const charT* s) const;
  constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1, const charT* s) const;
  constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1,
                        const charT* s, size_type n2) const;
  constexpr size_type find(basic_string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find(charT c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n) const;
  constexpr size_type find(const charT* s, size_type pos = 0) const;
  constexpr size_type rfind(basic_string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type rfind(charT c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type rfind(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n) const;
  constexpr size_type rfind(const charT* s, size_type pos = npos) const;
  constexpr size_type find_first_of(basic_string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_first_of(charT c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_first_of(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n) const;
  constexpr size_type find_first_of(const charT* s, size_type pos = 0) const;
  constexpr size_type find_last_of(basic_string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_last_of(charT c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_last_of(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n) const;
  constexpr size_type find_last_of(const charT* s, size_type pos = npos) const;
  constexpr size_type find_first_not_of(basic_string_view s, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_first_not_of(charT c, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_first_not_of(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n) const;
  constexpr size_type find_first_not_of(const charT* s, size_type pos = 0) const;
  constexpr size_type find_last_not_of(basic_string_view s, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_last_not_of(charT c, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
  constexpr size_type find_last_not_of(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n) const;
  constexpr size_type find_last_not_of(const charT* s, size_type pos = npos) const;

 private:
  const_pointer data_;  // exposition only
  size_type     size_;  // exposition only
};

In every specialization basic_string_view<charT, traits>, the type traits shall satisfy the character traits requirements (C++14 §21.2), and the type traits::char_type shall name the same type as charT.

7.3

basic_string_view constructors and assignment operators

[string.view.cons]
constexpr basic_string_view() noexcept;
Effects:
Constructs an empty basic_string_view.
Postconditions:
size_ == 0 and data_ == nullptr.
template<class Allocator>
basic_string_view(const basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator>& str) noexcept;
Effects:
Constructs a basic_string_view, with the postconditions in Table 7.
Table 7 — basic_string_view(const basic_string&) effects
ElementValue
data_str.data()
size_str.size()
constexpr basic_string_view(const charT* str);
Requires:
[str, str + traits::length(str)) is a valid range.
Effects:
Constructs a basic_string_view referring to the same string as str, with the postconditions in Table 8.
Table 8 — basic_string_view(const charT*) effects
ElementValue
data_str
size_traits::length(str)
Complexity:
O(traits::length(str))
constexpr basic_string_view(const charT* str, size_type len);
Requires:
[str, str + len) is a valid range.
Effects:
Constructs a basic_string_view, with the postconditions in Table 9.
Table 9 — basic_string_view(const charT*, size_type) effects
ElementValue
data_str
size_len
7.4

basic_string_view iterator support

[string.view.iterators]
typedef implementation-defined const_iterator;

A constant random-access iterator type such that, for a const_iterator it, if &*(it+N) is valid, then it is equal to (&*it)+N.

For a basic_string_view str, any operation that invalidates a pointer in the range [str.data(), str.data()+str.size()) invalidates pointers, iterators, and references returned from str's methods.

All requirements on container iterators (C++14 §23.2) apply to basic_string_view::const_iterator as well.

constexpr const_iterator begin() const noexcept;constexpr const_iterator cbegin() const noexcept;
Returns:
An iterator such that &*begin() == data_ if !empty(), or else an unspecified value such that [begin(), end()) is a valid range.
constexpr const_iterator end() const noexcept;constexpr const_iterator cend() const noexcept;
Returns:
begin() + size()
const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const noexcept;const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const noexcept;
Returns:
const_reverse_iterator(end()).
const_reverse_iterator rend() const noexcept;const_reverse_iterator crend() const noexcept;
Returns:
const_reverse_iterator(begin()).
7.5

basic_string_view capacity

[string.view.capacity]
constexpr size_type size() const noexcept;
Returns:
size_
constexpr size_type length() const noexcept;
Returns:
size_.
constexpr size_type max_size() const noexcept;
Returns:
The largest possible number of char-like objects that can be referred to by a basic_string_view.
constexpr bool empty() const noexcept;
Returns:
size_ == 0.
7.6

basic_string_view element access

[string.view.access]
constexpr const_reference operator[](size_type pos) const;
Requires:
pos < size().
Returns:
data_[pos]
Throws:
Nothing.

[ Note: Unlike basic_string::operator[], basic_string_view::operator[](size()) has undefined behavior instead of returning charT(). end note ]

constexpr const_reference at(size_type pos) const;
Throws:
out_of_range if pos >= size().
Returns:
data_[pos].
constexpr const_reference front() const;
Requires:
!empty()
Returns:
data_[0].
Throws:
Nothing.
constexpr const_reference back() const;
Requires:
!empty()
Returns:
data_[size() - 1].
Throws:
Nothing.
constexpr const_pointer data() const noexcept;
Returns:
data_

[ Note: Unlike basic_string::data() and string literals, data() may return a pointer to a buffer that is not null-terminated. Therefore it is typically a mistake to pass data() to a routine that takes just a const charT* and expects a null-terminated string. end note ]

7.7

basic_string_view modifiers

[string.view.modifiers]
constexpr void remove_prefix(size_type n);
Requires:
n <= size()
Effects:
Equivalent to data_ += n; size_ -= n;
constexpr void remove_suffix(size_type n);
Requires:
n <= size()
Effects:
Equivalent to size_ -= n;
constexpr void swap(basic_string_view& s) noexcept;
Effects:
Exchanges the values of *this and s.
7.8

basic_string_view string operations

[string.view.ops]
template<class Allocator>
explicit3 operator basic_string<
    charT, traits, Allocator>() const;
Effects:
Equivalent to basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator>(begin(), end()).
Complexity:
O(size())

[ Note: Users who want to control the allocator instance should call to_string(allocator). end note ]

template<class Allocator = allocator<charT>>
basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator> to_string(
    const Allocator& a = Allocator()) const;
Returns:
basic_string<charT, traits, Allocator>(begin(), end(), a).
Complexity:
O(size())
size_type copy(charT* s, size_type n, size_type pos = 0) const;

Let rlen be the smaller of n and size() - pos.

Throws:
out_of_range if pos > size().
Requires:
[s, s + rlen) is a valid range.
Effects:
Equivalent to std::copy_n(begin() + pos, rlen, s).
Returns:
rlen.
Complexity:
O(rlen)
constexpr basic_string_view substr(size_type pos = 0, size_type n = npos) const;
Throws:
out_of_range if pos > size().
Effects:
Determines the effective length rlen of the string to reference as the smaller of n and size() - pos.
Returns:
basic_string_view(data()+pos, rlen).
constexpr int compare(basic_string_view str) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the effective length rlen of the strings to compare as the smaller of size() and str.size(). The function then compares the two strings by calling traits::compare(data(), str.data(), rlen).
Complexity:
O(rlen)
Returns:
The nonzero result if the result of the comparison is nonzero. Otherwise, returns a value as indicated in Table 10.
Table 10 — compare() results
ConditionReturn Value
size() < str.size()< 0
size() == str.size()  0
size() > str.size()> 0
constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1, basic_string_view str) const;
Effects:
Equivalent to substr(pos1, n1).compare(str).
constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1, basic_string_view str,
                      size_type pos2, size_type n2) const;
Effects:
Equivalent to substr(pos1, n1).compare(str.substr(pos2, n2)).
constexpr int compare(const charT* s) const;
Effects:
Equivalent to compare(basic_string_view(s)).
constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1, const charT* s) const;
Effects:
Equivalent to substr(pos1, n1).compare(basic_string_view(s)).
constexpr int compare(size_type pos1, size_type n1,
                      const charT* s, size_type n2) const;
Effects:
Equivalent to substr(pos1, n1).compare(basic_string_view(s, n2)).
7.8.1

Searching basic_string_view

[string.view.find]

This section specifies the basic_string_view member functions named find, rfind, find_first_of, find_last_of, find_first_not_of, and find_last_not_of.

Member functions in this section have complexity O(size() * str.size()) at worst, although implementations are encouraged to do better.

Each member function of the form

constexpr return-type fx1(const charT* s, size_type pos);

is equivalent to fx1(basic_string_view(s), pos).

Each member function of the form

constexpr return-type fx1(const charT* s, size_type pos, size_type n);

is equivalent to fx1(basic_string_view(s, n), pos).

Each member function of the form

constexpr return-type fx2(charT c, size_type pos);

is equivalent to fx2(basic_string_view(&c, 1), pos).

constexpr size_type find(basic_string_view str, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the lowest position xpos, if possible, such that the following conditions obtain:
  • pos <= xpos
  • xpos + str.size() <= size()
  • traits::eq(at(xpos+I), str.at(I)) for all elements I of the string referenced by str.
Returns:
xpos if the function can determine such a value for xpos. Otherwise, returns npos.
Remarks:
Uses traits::eq().
constexpr size_type rfind(basic_string_view str, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the highest position xpos, if possible, such that the following conditions obtain:
  • xpos <= pos
  • xpos + str.size() <= size()
  • traits::eq(at(xpos+I), str.at(I)) for all elements I of the string referenced by str.
Returns:
xpos if the function can determine such a value for xpos. Otherwise, returns npos.
Remarks:
Uses traits::eq().
constexpr size_type find_first_of(basic_string_view str, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the lowest position xpos, if possible, such that the following conditions obtain:
  • pos <= xpos
  • xpos < size()
  • traits::eq(at(xpos), str.at(I)) for some element I of the string referenced by str.
Returns:
xpos if the function can determine such a value for xpos. Otherwise, returns npos.
Remarks:
Uses traits::eq().
constexpr size_type find_last_of(basic_string_view str, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the highest position xpos, if possible, such that the following conditions obtain:
  • xpos <= pos
  • xpos < size()
  • traits::eq(at(xpos), str.at(I)) for some element I of the string referenced by str.
Returns:
xpos if the function can determine such a value for xpos. Otherwise, returns npos.
Remarks:
Uses traits::eq().
constexpr size_type find_first_not_of(basic_string_view str, size_type pos = 0) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the lowest position xpos, if possible, such that the following conditions obtain:
  • pos <= xpos
  • xpos < size()
  • traits::eq(at(xpos), str.at(I)) for no element I of the string referenced by str.
Returns:
xpos if the function can determine such a value for xpos. Otherwise, returns npos.
Remarks:
Uses traits::eq().
constexpr size_type find_last_not_of(basic_string_view str, size_type pos = npos) const noexcept;
Effects:
Determines the highest position xpos, if possible, such that the following conditions obtain:
  • xpos <= pos
  • xpos < size()
  • traits::eq(at(xpos), str.at(I)) for no element I of the string referenced by str.
Returns:
xpos if the function can determine such a value for xpos. Otherwise, returns npos.
Remarks:
Uses traits::eq().
7.9

basic_string_view non-member comparison functions

[string.view.comparison]

Let S be basic_string_view<charT, traits>, and sv be an instance of S. Implementations shall provide sufficient additional overloads marked constexpr and noexcept so that an object t with an implicit conversion to S can be compared according to Table 11.

Table 11 — Additional basic_string_view comparison overloads
ExpressionEquivalent to
t == svS(t) == sv
sv == tsv == S(t)
t != svS(t) != sv
sv != tsv != S(t)
t < svS(t) < sv
sv < tsv < S(t)
t > svS(t) > sv
sv > tsv > S(t)
t <= svS(t) <= sv
sv <= tsv <= S(t)
t >= svS(t) >= sv
sv >= tsv >= S(t)
[ Example: A sample conforming implementation for operator== would be:
template<class T> using __identity = decay_t<T>;
template<class charT, class traits>
constexpr bool operator==(
    basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
    basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept {
  return lhs.compare(rhs) == 0;
}
template<class charT, class traits>
constexpr bool operator==(
    basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
    __identity<basic_string_view<charT, traits>> rhs) noexcept {
  return lhs.compare(rhs) == 0;
}
template<class charT, class traits>
constexpr bool operator==(
    __identity<basic_string_view<charT, traits>> lhs,
    basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept {
  return lhs.compare(rhs) == 0;
}
end example ]
template<class charT, class traits>
  constexpr bool operator==(basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
                            basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept;
Returns:
lhs.compare(rhs) == 0.
template<class charT, class traits>
  constexpr bool operator!=(basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
                            basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept;
Returns:
lhs.compare(rhs) != 0.
template<class charT, class traits>
  constexpr bool operator< (basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
                            basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept;
Returns:
lhs.compare(rhs) < 0.
template<class charT, class traits>
  constexpr bool operator> (basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
                            basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept;
Returns:
lhs.compare(rhs) > 0.
template<class charT, class traits>
  constexpr bool operator<=(basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
                            basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept;
Returns:
lhs.compare(rhs) <= 0.
template<class charT, class traits>
  constexpr bool operator>=(basic_string_view<charT, traits> lhs,
                            basic_string_view<charT, traits> rhs) noexcept;
Returns:
lhs.compare(rhs) >= 0.
7.10

Inserters and extractors

[string.view.io]
template<class charT, class traits>
  basic_ostream<charT, traits>&
    operator<<(basic_ostream<charT, traits>& os,
               basic_string_view<charT, traits> str);
Effects:
Equivalent to os << str.to_string().
7.11

Hash support

[string.view.hash]
template <> struct hash<experimental::string_view>;template <> struct hash<experimental::u16string_view>;template <> struct hash<experimental::u32string_view>;template <> struct hash<experimental::wstring_view>;

The template specializations shall meet the requirements of class template hash (C++14 §20.9.12).

8

Memory

[memory]
8.1

Header <experimental/memory> synopsis

[header.memory.synop]
#include <memory>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  // See C++14 §20.7.7, uses_allocator
  template <class T, class Alloc> constexpr bool uses_allocator_v
    = uses_allocator<T, Alloc>::value;

  // 8.2.1, Class template shared_ptr
  template<class T> class shared_ptr;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.6
  template<class T, class... Args> shared_ptr<T> make_shared(Args&&... args);
  template<class T, class A, class... Args>
    shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared(const A& a, Args&&... args);

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.7
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator==(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator!=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator<(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator>(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator<=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator>=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator==(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator==(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator!=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator!=(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<=(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>=(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.8
  template<class T> void swap(shared_ptr<T>& a, shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;

  // 8.2.1.3, shared_ptr casts
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> static_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> dynamic_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> const_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> reinterpret_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.10
  template<class D, class T> D* get_deleter(const shared_ptr<T>& p) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.11
  template<class E, class T, class Y>
    basic_ostream<E, T>& operator<< (basic_ostream<E, T>& os, const shared_ptr<Y>& p);

  // C++14 §20.8.2.3
  template<class T> class weak_ptr;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.3.6
  template<class T> void swap(weak_ptr<T>& a, weak_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.4
  template<class T> class owner_less;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.5
  template<class T> class enable_shared_from_this;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.6
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_is_lock_free(const shared_ptr<T>* p);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_load(const shared_ptr<T>* p);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_load_explicit(const shared_ptr<T>* p, memory_order mo);
  template<class T>
    void atomic_store(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r);
  template<class T>
    void atomic_store_explicit(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r, memory_order mo);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_exchange(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_exchange_explicit(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r,
                                           memory_order mo);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_weak(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_strong(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_weak_explicit(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w,
      memory_order success, memory_order failure);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_strong_explicit(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w,
      memory_order success, memory_order failure);

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental

  // C++14 §20.8.2.7
  template<class T> struct hash<experimental::shared_ptr<T>>;

} // namespace std
8.2

Shared-ownership pointers

[memory.smartptr]

The specification of all declarations within this sub-clause 8.2 and its sub-clauses are the same as the corresponding declarations, as specified in C++14 §20.8.2, unless explicitly specified otherwise.

8.2.1

Class template shared_ptr

[memory.smartptr.shared]

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  template<class T> class shared_ptr {
  public:
    typedef typename remove_extent_t<T> element_type;
    // 8.2.1.1, shared_ptr constructors
    constexpr shared_ptr() noexcept;
    template<class Y> explicit shared_ptr(Y* p);
    template<class Y, class D> shared_ptr(Y* p, D d);
    template<class Y, class D, class A> shared_ptr(Y* p, D d, A a);
    template <class D> shared_ptr(nullptr_t p, D d)
    template <class D, class A> shared_ptr(nullptr_t p, D d, A a);
    template<class Y> shared_ptr(const shared_ptr<Y>& r, element_type* p) noexcept;
    shared_ptr(const shared_ptr& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> shared_ptr(const shared_ptr<Y>& r) noexcept;
    shared_ptr(shared_ptr&& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> shared_ptr(shared_ptr<Y>&& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> explicit shared_ptr(const weak_ptr<Y>& r);
    template<class Y> shared_ptr(auto_ptr<Y>&& r);
    template <class Y, class D> shared_ptr(unique_ptr<Y, D>&& r);
    constexpr shared_ptr(nullptr_t) : shared_ptr() { }

    // C++14 §20.8.2.2.2
    ~shared_ptr();

    // C++14 §20.8.2.2.3
    shared_ptr& operator=(const shared_ptr& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> shared_ptr& operator=(const shared_ptr<Y>& r) noexcept;
    shared_ptr& operator=(shared_ptr&& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> shared_ptr& operator=(shared_ptr<Y>&& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> shared_ptr& operator=(auto_ptr<Y>&& r);
    template <class Y, class D> shared_ptr& operator=(unique_ptr<Y, D>&& r);

    // C++14 §20.8.2.2.4
    void swap(shared_ptr& r) noexcept;
    void reset() noexcept;
    template<class Y> void reset(Y* p);
    template<class Y, class D> void reset(Y* p, D d);
    template<class Y, class D, class A> void reset(Y* p, D d, A a);

    // 8.2.1.2, shared_ptr observers
    element_type* get() const noexcept;
    T& operator*() const noexcept;
    T* operator->() const noexcept;
    element_type& operator[](ptrdiff_t i) const noexcept;
    long use_count() const noexcept;
    bool unique() const noexcept;
    explicit operator bool() const noexcept;
    template<class U> bool owner_before(shared_ptr<U> const& b) const;
    template<class U> bool owner_before(weak_ptr<U> const& b) const;
  };

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.6
  template<class T, class... Args> shared_ptr<T> make_shared(Args&&... args);
  template<class T, class A, class... Args>
    shared_ptr<T> allocate_shared(const A& a, Args&&... args);

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.7
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator==(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator!=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator<(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator>(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator<=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    bool operator>=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, const shared_ptr<U>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator==(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator==(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator!=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator!=(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator<=(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>=(const shared_ptr<T>& a, nullptr_t) noexcept;
  template <class T>
    bool operator>=(nullptr_t, const shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.8
  template<class T> void swap(shared_ptr<T>& a, shared_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;

  // 8.2.1.3, shared_ptr casts
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> static_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> dynamic_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> const_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
  template<class T, class U>
    shared_ptr<T> reinterpret_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.10
  template<class D, class T> D* get_deleter(const shared_ptr<T>& p) noexcept;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.2.11
  template<class E, class T, class Y>
    basic_ostream<E, T>& operator<< (basic_ostream<E, T>& os, const shared_ptr<Y>& p);

  // C++14 §20.8.2.4
  template<class T> class owner_less;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.5
  template<class T> class enable_shared_from_this;

  // C++14 §20.8.2.6
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_is_lock_free(const shared_ptr<T>* p);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_load(const shared_ptr<T>* p);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_load_explicit(const shared_ptr<T>* p, memory_order mo);
  template<class T>
    void atomic_store(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r);
  template<class T>
    void atomic_store_explicit(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r, memory_order mo);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_exchange(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r);
  template<class T>
    shared_ptr<T> atomic_exchange_explicit(shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T> r,
                                           memory_order mo);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_weak(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_strong(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_weak_explicit(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w,
      memory_order success, memory_order failure);
  template<class T>
    bool atomic_compare_exchange_strong_explicit(
      shared_ptr<T>* p, shared_ptr<T>* v, shared_ptr<T> w,
      memory_order success, memory_order failure);


} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental

  // C++14 §20.8.2.7
  template<class T> struct hash<experimental::shared_ptr<T>>;

} // namespace std

For the purposes of subclause 8.2, a pointer type Y* is said to be compatible with a pointer type T* when either Y* is convertible to T* or Y is U[N] and T is U cv [].

8.2.1.1

shared_ptr constructors

[memory.smartptr.shared.const]
template<class Y> explicit shared_ptr(Y* p);
Requires:
Y shall be a complete type. The expression delete[] p, when T is an array type, or delete p, when T is not an array type, shall be well-formed, shall have well defined behavior, and shall not throw exceptions. When T is U[N], Y(*)[N] shall be convertible to T*; when T is U[], Y(*)[] shall be convertible to T*; otherwise, Y* shall be convertible to T*.
Effects:
When T is not an array type, constructs a shared_ptr object that owns the pointer p. Otherwise, constructs a shared_ptr that owns p and a deleter of an unspecified type that calls delete[] p.
Postconditions:
use_count() == 1 && get() == p.
Throws:
bad_alloc, or an implementation-defined exception when a resource other than memory could not be obtained.
Exception safety:
If an exception is thrown, delete p is called when T is not an array type, delete[] p otherwise.
template<class Y, class D> shared_ptr(Y* p, D d);template<class Y, class D, class A> shared_ptr(Y* p, D d, A a);template <class D> shared_ptr(nullptr_t p, D d);template <class D, class A> shared_ptr(nullptr_t p, D d, A a);
Requires:
D shall be CopyConstructible. The copy constructor and destructor of D shall not throw exceptions. The expression d(p) shall be well formed, shall have well defined behavior, and shall not throw exceptions. A shall be an allocator (C++14 §17.6.3.5). The copy constructor and destructor of A shall not throw exceptions. When T is U[N], Y(*)[N] shall be convertible to T*; when T is U[], Y(*)[] shall be convertible to T*; otherwise, Y* shall be convertible to T*.
Effects:
Constructs a shared_ptr object that owns the object p and the deleter d. The second and fourth constructors shall use a copy of a to allocate memory for internal use.
Postconditions:
use_count() == 1 && get() == p.
Throws:
bad_alloc, or an implementation-defined exception when a resource other than memory could not be obtained.
Exception safety:
If an exception is thrown, d(p) is called.
template<class Y> shared_ptr(const shared_ptr<Y>& r, element_type* p) noexcept;
Effects:
Constructs a shared_ptr instance that stores p and shares ownership with r.
Postconditions:
get() == p && use_count() == r.use_count()

[ Note: To avoid the possibility of a dangling pointer, the user of this constructor must ensure that p remains valid at least until the ownership group of r is destroyed. end note ]

[ Note: This constructor allows creation of an empty shared_ptr instance with a non-null stored pointer. end note ]

shared_ptr(const shared_ptr& r) noexcept;template<class Y> shared_ptr(const shared_ptr<Y>& r) noexcept;
Requires:
The second constructor shall not participate in the overload resolution unless Y* is compatible with T*.
Effects:
If r is empty, constructs an empty shared_ptr object; otherwise, constructs a shared_ptr object that shares ownership with r.
Postconditions:
get() == r.get() && use_count() == r.use_count().
shared_ptr(shared_ptr&& r) noexcept;template<class Y> shared_ptr(shared_ptr<Y>&& r) noexcept;
Remarks:
The second constructor shall not participate in overload resolution unless Y* is compatible with T*.
Effects:
Move-constructs a shared_ptr instance from r.
Postconditions:
*this shall contain the old value of r. r shall be empty. r.get() == 0.
template<class Y> explicit shared_ptr(const weak_ptr<Y>& r);
Requires:
Y* shall be compatible with T*.
Effects:
Constructs a shared_ptr object that shares ownership with r and stores a copy of the pointer stored in r.
Postconditions:
use_count() == r.use_count().
Throws:
bad_weak_ptr when r.expired().
Exception safety:
If an exception is thrown, the constructor has no effect.
template <class Y, class D> shared_ptr(unique_ptr<Y, D>&& r);
Requires:
Y* shall be compatible with T*.
Effects:
Equivalent to shared_ptr(r.release(), r.get_deleter()) when D is not a reference type, otherwise shared_ptr(r.release(), ref(r.get_deleter())).
Exception safety:
If an exception is thrown, the constructor has no effect.
8.2.1.2

shared_ptr observers

[memory.smartptr.shared.obs]
element_type* get() const noexcept;
Returns:
The stored pointer.
T& operator*() const noexcept;
Requires:
get() != 0.
Returns:
*get().
Remarks:
When T is an array type or cv-qualified void, it is unspecified whether this member function is declared. If it is declared, it is unspecified what its return type is, except that the declaration (although not necessarily the definition) of the function shall be well formed.
T* operator->() const noexcept;
Requires:
get() != 0.
Returns:
get().
Remarks:
When T is an array type, it is unspecified whether this member function is declared. If it is declared, it is unspecified what its return type is, except that the declaration (although not necessarily the definition) of the function shall be well formed.
element_type& operator[](ptrdiff_t i) const noexcept;
Requires:
get() != 0 && i >= 0. If T is U[N], i < N.
Returns:
get()[i].
Remarks:
When T is not an array type, it is unspecified whether this member function is declared. If it is declared, it is unspecified what its return type is, except that the declaration (although not necessarily the definition) of the function shall be well formed.
8.2.1.3

shared_ptr casts

[memory.smartptr.shared.cast]
template<class T, class U> shared_ptr<T> static_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
Requires:
The expression static_cast<T*>((U*)0) shall be well formed.
Returns:
shared_ptr<T>(r, static_cast<typename shared_ptr<T>::element_type*>(r.get()))

[ Note: The seemingly equivalent expression shared_ptr<T>(static_cast<T*>(r.get())) will eventually result in undefined behavior, attempting to delete the same object twice. end note ]

template<class T, class U> shared_ptr<T> dynamic_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
Requires:
The expression dynamic_cast<T*>((U*)0) shall be well formed.
Returns:
  • When dynamic_cast<typename shared_ptr<T>::element_type*>(r.get()) returns a nonzero value p, shared_ptr<T>(r, p);
  • Otherwise, shared_ptr<T>().

[ Note: The seemingly equivalent expression shared_ptr<T>(dynamic_cast<T*>(r.get())) will eventually result in undefined behavior, attempting to delete the same object twice. end note ]

template<class T, class U> shared_ptr<T> const_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
Requires:
The expression const_cast<T*>((U*)0) shall be well formed.
Returns:
shared_ptr<T>(r, const_cast<typename shared_ptr<T>::element_type*>(r.get())).

[ Note: The seemingly equivalent expression shared_ptr<T>(const_cast<T*>(r.get())) will eventually result in undefined behavior, attempting to delete the same object twice. end note ]

template<class T, class U> shared_ptr<T> reinterpret_pointer_cast(const shared_ptr<U>& r) noexcept;
Requires:
The expression reinterpret_cast<T*>((U*)0) shall be well formed.
Returns:
shared_ptr<T>(r, reinterpret_cast<typename shared_ptr<T>::element_type*>(r.get())).
8.2.2

Class template weak_ptr

[memory.smartptr.weak]

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  template<class T> class weak_ptr {
  public:
    typedef typename remove_extent_t<T> element_type;

    // 8.2.2.1, weak_ptr constructors
    constexpr weak_ptr() noexcept;
    template<class Y> weak_ptr(shared_ptr<Y> const& r) noexcept;
    weak_ptr(weak_ptr const& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> weak_ptr(weak_ptr<Y> const& r) noexcept;
    weak_ptr(weak_ptr&& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> weak_ptr(weak_ptr<Y>&& r) noexcept;

    // C++14 §20.8.2.3.2
    ~weak_ptr();

    // C++14 §20.8.2.3.3
    weak_ptr& operator=(weak_ptr const& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> weak_ptr& operator=(weak_ptr<Y> const& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> weak_ptr& operator=(shared_ptr<Y> const& r) noexcept;
    weak_ptr& operator=(weak_ptr&& r) noexcept;
    template<class Y> weak_ptr& operator=(weak_ptr<Y>&& r) noexcept;

    // C++14 §20.8.2.3.4
    void swap(weak_ptr& r) noexcept;
    void reset() noexcept;

    // C++14 §20.8.2.3.5
    long use_count() const noexcept;
    bool expired() const noexcept;
    shared_ptr<T> lock() const noexcept;
    template<class U> bool owner_before(shared_ptr<U> const& b) const;
    template<class U> bool owner_before(weak_ptr<U> const& b) const;
  };

  // C++14 §20.8.2.3.6
  template<class T> void swap(weak_ptr<T>& a, weak_ptr<T>& b) noexcept;

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.2.2.1

weak_ptr constructors

[memory.smartptr.weak.const]
weak_ptr(const weak_ptr& r) noexcept;template<class Y> weak_ptr(const weak_ptr<Y>& r) noexcept;template<class Y> weak_ptr(const shared_ptr<Y>& r) noexcept;
Requires:
The second and third constructors shall not participate in the overload resolution unless Y* is compatible with T*.
Effects:
If r is empty, constructs an empty weak_ptr object; otherwise, constructs a weak_ptr object that shares ownership with r and stores a copy of the pointer stored in r.
Postconditions:
use_count() == r.use_count().
8.3

Type-erased allocator

[memory.type.erased.allocator]

A type-erased allocator is an allocator or memory resource, alloc, used to allocate internal data structures for an object X of type C, but where C is not dependent on the type of alloc. Once alloc has been supplied to X (typically as a constructor argument), alloc can be retrieved from X only as a pointer rptr of static type std::experimental::pmr::memory_resource* (8.5). The process by which rptr is computed from alloc depends on the type of alloc as described in Table 12:

Table 12 — Computed memory_resource for type-erased allocator
If the type of alloc is then the value of rptr is
non-existent — no alloc specified The value of experimental::pmr::get_default_resource() at the time of construction.
nullptr_t The value of experimental::pmr::get_default_resource() at the time of construction.
a pointer type convertible to pmr::memory_resource* static_cast<experimental::pmr::memory_resource*>(alloc)
pmr::polymorphic_allocator<U> alloc.resource()
any other type meeting the Allocator requirements (C++14 §17.6.3.5) a pointer to a value of type experimental::pmr::resource_adaptor<A> where A is the type of alloc. rptr remains valid only for the lifetime of X.
None of the above The program is ill-formed.

Additionally, class C shall meet the following requirements:

  • C::allocator_type shall be identical to std::experimental::erased_type.
  • X.get_memory_resource() returns rptr.
8.4

Header <experimental/memory_resource> synopsis

[memory.resource.synop]
namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  class memory_resource;

  bool operator==(const memory_resource& a,
                  const memory_resource& b) noexcept;
  bool operator!=(const memory_resource& a,
                  const memory_resource& b) noexcept;

  template <class Tp> class polymorphic_allocator;

  template <class T1, class T2>
  bool operator==(const polymorphic_allocator<T1>& a,
                  const polymorphic_allocator<T2>& b) noexcept;
  template <class T1, class T2>
  bool operator!=(const polymorphic_allocator<T1>& a,
                  const polymorphic_allocator<T2>& b) noexcept;

  // The name resource_adaptor_imp is for exposition only.
  template <class Allocator> class resource_adaptor_imp;

  template <class Allocator>
    using resource_adaptor = resource_adaptor_imp<
      allocator_traits<Allocator>::rebind_alloc<char>>;

  // Global memory resources
  memory_resource* new_delete_resource() noexcept;
  memory_resource* null_memory_resource() noexcept;

  // The default memory resource
  memory_resource* set_default_resource(memory_resource* r) noexcept;
  memory_resource* get_default_resource() noexcept;

  // Standard memory resources
  struct pool_options;
  class synchronized_pool_resource;
  class unsynchronized_pool_resource;
  class monotonic_buffer_resource;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.5

Class memory_resource

[memory.resource]
8.5.1

Class memory_resource overview

[memory.resource.overview]

The memory_resource class is an abstract interface to an unbounded set of classes encapsulating memory resources.

class memory_resource {
  // For exposition only
  static constexpr size_t max_align = alignof(max_align_t);

public:
  virtual ~memory_resource();

  void* allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment = max_align);
  void deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes,
                  size_t alignment = max_align);

  bool is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;

protected:
  virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment) = 0;
  virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes,
                             size_t alignment) = 0;

  virtual bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept = 0;
};
8.5.2

memory_resource public member functions

[memory.resource.public]
~memory_resource();
Effects:
Destroys this memory_resource.
void* allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment = max_align);
Effects:
Equivalent to return do_allocate(bytes, alignment);
void deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment = max_align);
Effects:
Equivalent to do_deallocate(p, bytes, alignment);
bool is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
Effects:
Equivalent to return do_is_equal(other);
8.5.3

memory_resource protected virtual member functions

[memory.resource.priv]
virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment) = 0;
Requires:
Alignment shall be a power of two.
Returns:
A derived class shall implement this function to return a pointer to allocated storage (C++14 §3.7.4.2) with a size of at least bytes. The returned storage is aligned to the specified alignment, if such alignment is supported; otherwise it is aligned to max_align.
Throws:
A derived class implementation shall throw an appropriate exception if it is unable to allocate memory with the requested size and alignment.
virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment) = 0;
Requires:
p shall have been returned from a prior call to allocate(bytes, alignment) on a memory resource equal to *this, and the storage at p shall not yet have been deallocated.
Effects:
A derived class shall implement this function to dispose of allocated storage.
Throws:
Nothing.
virtual bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept = 0;
Returns:
A derived class shall implement this function to return true if memory allocated from this can be deallocated from other and vice-versa; otherwise it shall return false. [ Note: The most-derived type of other might not match the type of this. For a derived class, D, a typical implementation of this function will compute dynamic_cast<const D*>(&other) and go no further (i.e., return false) if it returns nullptr. end note ]
8.5.4

memory_resource equality

[memory.resource.eq]
bool operator==(const memory_resource& a, const memory_resource& b) noexcept;
Returns:
&a == &b || a.is_equal(b).
bool operator!=(const memory_resource& a, const memory_resource& b) noexcept;
Returns:
!(a == b).
8.6

Class template polymorphic_allocator

[memory.polymorphic.allocator.class]
8.6.1

Class template polymorphic_allocator overview

[memory.polymorphic.allocator.overview]

A specialization of class template pmr::polymorphic_allocator conforms to the Allocator requirements (C++14 §17.6.3.5). Constructed with different memory resources, different instances of the same specialization of pmr::polymorphic_allocator can exhibit entirely different allocation behavior. This runtime polymorphism allows objects that use polymorphic_allocator to behave as if they used different allocator types at run time even though they use the same static allocator type.

template <class Tp>
class polymorphic_allocator {
  memory_resource* m_resource; // For exposition only

public:
  typedef Tp value_type;

  polymorphic_allocator() noexcept;
  polymorphic_allocator(memory_resource* r);

  polymorphic_allocator(const polymorphic_allocator& other) = default;

  template <class U>
    polymorphic_allocator(const polymorphic_allocator<U>& other) noexcept;

  polymorphic_allocator&
    operator=(const polymorphic_allocator& rhs) = default;

  Tp* allocate(size_t n);
  void deallocate(Tp* p, size_t n);

  template <class T, class... Args>
    void construct(T* p, Args&&... args);

  // Specializations for pair using piecewise construction
  template <class T1, class T2, class... Args1, class... Args2>
    void construct(pair<T1,T2>* p, piecewise_construct_t,
                   tuple<Args1...> x, tuple<Args2...> y);
  template <class T1, class T2>
    void construct(pair<T1,T2>* p);
  template <class T1, class T2, class U, class V>
    void construct(pair<T1,T2>* p, U&& x, V&& y);
  template <class T1, class T2, class U, class V>
    void construct(pair<T1,T2>* p, const std::pair<U, V>& pr);
  template <class T1, class T2, class U, class V>
    void construct(pair<T1,T2>* p, pair<U, V>&& pr);

  template <class T>
    void destroy(T* p);

  // Return a default-constructed allocator (no allocator propagation)
  polymorphic_allocator select_on_container_copy_construction() const;

  memory_resource* resource() const;
};
8.6.2

polymorphic_allocator constructors

[memory.polymorphic.allocator.ctor]
polymorphic_allocator() noexcept;
Effects:
Sets m_resource to get_default_resource().
polymorphic_allocator(memory_resource* r);
Requires:
r is non-null.
Effects:
Sets m_resource to r.
Throws:
Nothing
Notes:
This constructor provides an implicit conversion from memory_resource*.
template <class U>
polymorphic_allocator(const polymorphic_allocator<U>& other) noexcept;
Effects:
Sets m_resource to other.resource().
8.6.3

polymorphic_allocator member functions

[memory.polymorphic.allocator.mem]
Tp* allocate(size_t n);
Returns:
Equivalent to static_cast<Tp*>(m_resource->allocate(n * sizeof(Tp), alignof(Tp))).
void deallocate(Tp* p, size_t n);
Requires:
p was allocated from a memory resource, x, equal to *m_resource, using x.allocate(n * sizeof(Tp), alignof(Tp)).
Effects:
Equivalent to m_resource->deallocate(p, n * sizeof(Tp), alignof(Tp)).
Throws:
Nothing.
template <class T, class... Args>
void construct(T* p, Args&&... args);
Requires:
Uses-allocator construction of T with allocator this->resource() (see 2.1) and constructor arguments std::forward<Args>(args)... is well-formed. [ Note: uses-allocator construction is always well formed for types that do not use allocators. end note ]
Effects:
Construct a T object at p by uses-allocator construction with allocator this->resource() (2.1) and constructor arguments std::forward<Args>(args)....
Throws:
: Nothing unless the constructor for T throws.
template <class T1, class T2, class... Args1, class... Args2>
void construct(pair<T1,T2>* p, piecewise_construct_t,
               tuple<Args1...> x, tuple<Args2...> y);
Effects:
Let xprime be a tuple constructed from x according to the appropriate rule from the following list. [ Note: The following description can be summarized as constructing a std::pair<T1,T2> object at p as if by separate uses-allocator construction with allocator this->resource() (2.1) of p->first using the elements of x and p->second using the elements of y. end note ]
  • If uses_allocator_v<T1,memory_resource*> is false and is_constructible_v<T,Args1...> is true, then xprime is x.
  • Otherwise, if uses_allocator_v<T1,memory_resource*> is true and is_constructible_v<T1,allocator_arg_t,memory_resource*,Args1...> is true, then xprime is tuple_cat(make_tuple(allocator_arg, this->resource()), std::move(x)).
  • Otherwise, if uses_allocator_v<T1,memory_resource*> is true and is_constructible_v<T1,Args1...,memory_resource*> is true, then xprime is tuple_cat(std::move(x), make_tuple(this->resource())).
  • Otherwise the program is ill formed.
and let yprime be a tuple constructed from y according to the appropriate rule from the following list:
  • If uses_allocator_v<T2,memory_resource*> is false and is_constructible_v<T,Args2...> is true, then yprime is y.
  • Otherwise, if uses_allocator_v<T2,memory_resource*> is true and is_constructible_v<T2,allocator_arg_t,memory_resource*,Args2...> is true, then yprime is tuple_cat(make_tuple(allocator_arg, this->resource()), std::move(y)).
  • Otherwise, if uses_allocator_v<T2,memory_resource*> is true and is_constructible_v<T2,Args2...,memory_resource*> is true, then yprime is tuple_cat(std::move(y), make_tuple(this->resource())).
  • Otherwise the program is ill formed.
then this function constructs a std::pair<T1,T2> object at p using constructor arguments piecewise_construct, xprime, yprime.
template <class T1, class T2>
void construct(std::pair<T1,T2>* p);
Effects:
Equivalent to this->construct(p, piecewise_construct, tuple<>(), tuple<>());
template <class T1, class T2, class U, class V>
void construct(std::pair<T1,T2>* p, U&& x, V&& y);
Effects:
Equivalent to this->construct(p, piecewise_construct, forward_as_tuple(std::forward<U>(x)), forward_as_tuple(std::forward<V>(y)));
template <class T1, class T2, class U, class V>
void construct(std::pair<T1,T2>* p, const std::pair<U, V>& pr);
Effects:
Equivalent to this->construct(p, piecewise_construct, forward_as_tuple(pr.first), forward_as_tuple(pr.second));
template <class T1, class T2, class U, class V>
void construct(std::pair<T1,T2>* p, std::pair<U, V>&& pr);
Effects:
Equivalent to this->construct(p, piecewise_construct, forward_as_tuple(std::forward<U>(pr.first)), forward_as_tuple(std::forward<V>(pr.second)));
template <class T>
void destroy(T* p);
Effects:
p->~T().
polymorphic_allocator select_on_container_copy_construction() const;
Returns:
polymorphic_allocator().
memory_resource* resource() const;
Returns:
m_resource.
8.6.4

polymorphic_allocator equality

[memory.polymorphic.allocator.eq]
template <class T1, class T2>
bool operator==(const polymorphic_allocator<T1>& a,
                const polymorphic_allocator<T2>& b) noexcept;
Returns:
*a.resource() == *b.resource().
template <class T1, class T2>
bool operator!=(const polymorphic_allocator<T1>& a,
                const polymorphic_allocator<T2>& b) noexcept;
Returns:
! (a == b)
8.7

template alias resource_adaptor

[memory.resource.adaptor]
8.7.1

resource_adaptor

[memory.resource.adaptor.overview]

An instance of resource_adaptor<Allocator> is an adaptor that wraps a memory_resource interface around Allocator. In order that resource_adaptor<X<T>> and resource_adaptor<X<U>> are the same type for any allocator template X and types T and U, resource_adaptor<Allocator> is rendered as an alias to a class template such that Allocator is rebound to a char value type in every specialization of the class template. The requirements on this class template are defined below. The name resource_adaptor_imp is for exposition only and is not normative, but the definitions of the members of that class, whatever its name, are normative. In addition to the Allocator requirements (C++14 §17.6.3.5), the parameter to resource_adaptor shall meet the following additional requirements:

  • typename allocator_traits<Allocator>::pointer shall be identical to typename allocator_traits<Allocator>::value_type*.
  • typename allocator_traits<Allocator>::const_pointer shall be identical to typename allocator_traits<Allocator>::value_type const*.
  • typename allocator_traits<Allocator>::void_pointer shall be identical to void*.
  • typename allocator_traits<Allocator>::const_void_pointer shall be identical to void const*.

// The name resource_adaptor_imp is for exposition only.
template <class Allocator>
class resource_adaptor_imp : public memory_resource {
  // for exposition only
  Allocator m_alloc;

public:
  typedef Allocator allocator_type;

  resource_adaptor_imp() = default;
  resource_adaptor_imp(const resource_adaptor_imp&) = default;
  resource_adaptor_imp(resource_adaptor_imp&&) = default;

  explicit resource_adaptor_imp(const Allocator& a2);
  explicit resource_adaptor_imp(Allocator&& a2);

  resource_adaptor_imp& operator=(const resource_adaptor_imp&) = default;

  allocator_type get_allocator() const { return m_alloc; }

protected:
  virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
  virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment);

  virtual bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
};

template <class Allocator>
  using resource_adaptor = typename resource_adaptor_imp<
    allocator_traits<Allocator>::template rebind_alloc<char>>;
8.7.2

resource_adaptor_imp constructors

[memory.resource.adaptor.ctor]
explicit resource_adaptor_imp(const Allocator& a2);
Effects:
Initializes m_alloc with a2.
explicit resource_adaptor_imp(Allocator&& a2);
Effects:
Initializes m_alloc with std::move(a2).
8.7.3

resource_adaptor_imp member functions

[memory.resource.adaptor.mem]
void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
Returns:
Allocated memory obtained by calling m_alloc.allocate. The size and alignment of the allocated memory shall meet the requirements for a class derived from memory_resource (8.5).
void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
Requires:
p was previously allocated using A.allocate, where A == m_alloc, and not subsequently deallocated.
Effects:
Returns memory to the allocator using m_alloc.deallocate().
bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;

Let p be dynamic_cast<const resource_adaptor_imp*>(&other).

Returns:
false if p is null, otherwise the value of m_alloc == p->m_alloc.
8.8

Access to program-wide memory_resource objects

[memory.resource.global]
memory_resource* new_delete_resource() noexcept;
Returns:
A pointer to a static-duration object of a type derived from memory_resource that can serve as a resource for allocating memory using ::operator new and ::operator delete. The same value is returned every time this function is called. For return value p and memory resource r, p->is_equal(r) returns &r == p.
memory_resource* null_memory_resource() noexcept;
Returns:
A pointer to a static-duration object of a type derived from memory_resource for which allocate() always throws bad_alloc and for which deallocate() has no effect. The same value is returned every time this function is called. For return value p and memory resource r, p->is_equal(r) returns &r == p.

The default memory resource pointer is a pointer to a memory resource that is used by certain facilities when an explicit memory resource is not supplied through the interface. Its initial value is the return value of new_delete_resource().

memory_resource* set_default_resource(memory_resource* r) noexcept;
Effects:
If r is non-null, sets the value of the default memory resource pointer to r, otherwise sets the default memory resource pointer to new_delete_resource().
Postconditions:
get_default_resource() == r.
Returns:
The previous value of the default memory resource pointer.
Remarks:
Calling the set_default_resource and get_default_resource functions shall not incur a data race. A call to the set_default_resource function shall synchronize with subsequent calls to the set_default_resource and get_default_resource functions.
memory_resource* get_default_resource() noexcept;
Returns:
The current value of the default memory resource pointer.
8.9

Pool resource classes

[memory.resource.pool]
8.9.1

Classes synchronized_pool_resource and unsynchronized_pool_resource

[memory.resource.pool.overview]

The synchronized_pool_resource and unsynchronized_pool_resource classes (collectively, pool resource classes) are general-purpose memory resources having the following qualities:

  • Each resource owns the allocated memory, and frees it on destruction – even if deallocate has not been called for some of the allocated blocks.
  • A pool resource (see Figure 1) consists of a collection of pools, serving requests for different block sizes. Each individual pool manages a collection of chunks that are in turn divided into blocks of uniform size, returned via calls to do_allocate. Each call to do_allocate(size, alignment) is dispatched to the pool serving the smallest blocks accommodating at least size bytes.
  • When a particular pool is exhausted, allocating a block from that pool results in the allocation of an additional chunk of memory from the upstream allocator (supplied at construction), thus replenishing the pool. With each successive replenishment, the chunk size obtained increases geometrically. [ Note: By allocating memory in chunks, the pooling strategy increases the chance that consecutive allocations will be close together in memory. end note ]
  • Allocation requests that exceed the largest block size of any pool are fulfilled directly from the upstream allocator.
  • A pool_options struct may be passed to the pool resource constructors to tune the largest block size and the maximum chunk size.
[ Example: Figure 1 shows a possible data structure that implements a pool resource.
Figure 1 —
pool resource
end example ]

A synchronized_pool_resource may be accessed from multiple threads without external synchronization and may have thread-specific pools to reduce synchronization costs. An unsynchronized_pool_resource class may not be accessed from multiple threads simultaneously and thus avoids the cost of synchronization entirely in single-threaded applications.

struct pool_options {
  size_t max_blocks_per_chunk = 0;
  size_t largest_required_pool_block = 0;
};

class synchronized_pool_resource : public memory_resource {
public:
  synchronized_pool_resource(const pool_options& opts, memory_resource* upstream);

  synchronized_pool_resource()
      : synchronized_pool_resource(pool_options(), get_default_resource()) { }
  explicit synchronized_pool_resource(memory_resource* upstream)
      : synchronized_pool_resource(pool_options(), upstream) { }
  explicit synchronized_pool_resource(const pool_options& opts)
      : synchronized_pool_resource(opts, get_default_resource()) { }

  synchronized_pool_resource(
      const synchronized_pool_resource&) = delete;
  virtual ~synchronized_pool_resource();

  synchronized_pool_resource& operator=(
      const synchronized_pool_resource&) = delete;

  void release();
  memory_resource* upstream_resource() const;
  pool_options options() const;

protected:
  virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
  virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment);

  virtual bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
};

class unsynchronized_pool_resource : public memory_resource {
public:
  unsynchronized_pool_resource(const pool_options& opts, memory_resource* upstream);

  unsynchronized_pool_resource()
      : unsynchronized_pool_resource(pool_options(), get_default_resource()) { }
  explicit unsynchronized_pool_resource(memory_resource* upstream)
      : unsynchronized_pool_resource(pool_options(), upstream) { }
  explicit unsynchronized_pool_resource(const pool_options& opts)
      : unsynchronized_pool_resource(opts, get_default_resource()) { }

  unsynchronized_pool_resource(
      const unsynchronized_pool_resource&) = delete;
  virtual ~unsynchronized_pool_resource();

  unsynchronized_pool_resource& operator=(
      const unsynchronized_pool_resource&) = delete;

  void release();
  memory_resource* upstream_resource() const;
  pool_options options() const;

protected:
  virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
  virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment);

  virtual bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
};
8.9.2

pool_options data members

[memory.resource.pool.options]

The members of pool_options comprise a set of constructor options for pool resources. The effect of each option on the pool resource behavior is described below:

size_t max_blocks_per_chunk;

The maximum number of blocks that will be allocated at once from the upstream memory resource to replenish a pool. If the value of max_blocks_per_chunk is zero or is greater than an implementation-defined limit, that limit is used instead. The implementation may choose to use a smaller value than is specified in this field and may use different values for different pools.

size_t largest_required_pool_block;

The largest allocation size that is required to be fulfilled using the pooling mechanism. Attempts to allocate a single block larger than this threshold will be allocated directly from the upstream memory resource. If largest_required_pool_block is zero or is greater than an implementation-defined limit, that limit is used instead. The implementation may choose a pass-through threshold larger than specified in this field.

8.9.3

pool resource constructors and destructors

[memory.resource.pool.ctor]
synchronized_pool_resource(const pool_options& opts, memory_resource* upstream);unsynchronized_pool_resource(const pool_options& opts, memory_resource* upstream);
Requires:
upstream is the address of a valid memory resource.
Effects:
Constructs a pool resource object that will obtain memory from upstream whenever the pool resource is unable to satisfy a memory request from its own internal data structures. The resulting object will hold a copy of upstream, but will not own the resource to which upstream points. [ Note: The intention is that calls to upstream->allocate() will be substantially fewer than calls to this->allocate() in most cases. end note ] The behavior of the pooling mechanism is tuned according to the value of the opts argument.
Throws:
Nothing unless upstream->allocate() throws. It is unspecified if or under what conditions this constructor calls upstream->allocate().
virtual ~synchronized_pool_resource();virtual ~unsynchronized_pool_resource();
Effects:
Calls this->release().
8.9.4

pool resource members

[memory.resource.pool.mem]
void release();
Effects:
Calls upstream_resource()->deallocate() as necessary to release all allocated memory. [ Note: memory is released back to upstream_resource() even if deallocate has not been called for some of the allocated blocks. end note ]
memory_resource* upstream_resource() const;
Returns:
The value of the upstream argument provided to the constructor of this object.
pool_options options() const;
Returns:
The options that control the pooling behavior of this resource. The values in the returned struct may differ from those supplied to the pool resource constructor in that values of zero will be replaced with implementation-defined defaults and sizes may be rounded to unspecified granularity.
virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
Returns:
A pointer to allocated storage (C++14 §3.7.4.2) with a size of at least bytes. The size and alignment of the allocated memory shall meet the requirements for a class derived from memory_resource (8.5).
Effects:
If the pool selected for a block of size bytes is unable to satisfy the memory request from its own internal data structures, it will call upstream_resource()->allocate() to obtain more memory. If bytes is larger than that which the largest pool can handle, then memory will be allocated using upstream_resource()->allocate().
Throws:
Nothing unless upstream_resource()->allocate() throws.
virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
Effects:
Return the memory at p to the pool. It is unspecified if or under what circumstances this operation will result in a call to upstream_resource()->deallocate().
Throws:
Nothing
virtual bool unsynchronized_pool_resource::do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
Returns:
this == dynamic_cast<const unsynchronized_pool_resource*>(&other).
virtual bool synchronized_pool_resource::do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
Returns:
this == dynamic_cast<const synchronized_pool_resource*>(&other).
8.10

Class monotonic_buffer_resource

[memory.resource.monotonic.buffer]
8.10.1

Class monotonic_buffer_resource overview

[memory.resource.monotonic.buffer.overview]

A monotonic_buffer_resource is a special-purpose memory resource intended for very fast memory allocations in situations where memory is used to build up a few objects and then is released all at once when the memory resource object is destroyed. It has the following qualities:

  • A call to deallocate has no effect, thus the amount of memory consumed increases monotonically until the resource is destroyed.
  • The program can supply an initial buffer, which the allocator uses to satisfy memory requests.
  • When the initial buffer (if any) is exhausted, it obtains additional buffers from an upstream memory resource supplied at construction. Each additional buffer is larger than the previous one, following a geometric progression.
  • It is intended for access from one thread of control at a time. Specifically, calls to allocate and deallocate do not synchronize with one another.
  • It owns the allocated memory and frees it on destruction, even if deallocate has not been called for some of the allocated blocks.
class monotonic_buffer_resource : public memory_resource {
  memory_resource* upstream_rsrc; // exposition only
  void* current_buffer; // exposition only
  size_t next_buffer_size; // exposition only

public:
  explicit monotonic_buffer_resource(memory_resource* upstream);
  monotonic_buffer_resource(size_t initial_size,
                            memory_resource* upstream);
  monotonic_buffer_resource(void* buffer, size_t buffer_size,
                            memory_resource* upstream);

  monotonic_buffer_resource()
      : monotonic_buffer_resource(get_default_resource()) { }
  explicit monotonic_buffer_resource(size_t initial_size)
      : monotonic_buffer_resource(initial_size,
                                  get_default_resource()) { }
  monotonic_buffer_resource(void* buffer, size_t buffer_size)
      : monotonic_buffer_resource(buffer, buffer_size,
                                  get_default_resource()) { }

  monotonic_buffer_resource(const monotonic_buffer_resource&) = delete;

  virtual ~monotonic_buffer_resource();

  monotonic_buffer_resource operator=(
      const monotonic_buffer_resource&) = delete;

  void release();
  memory_resource* upstream_resource() const;

protected:
  virtual void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
  virtual void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes,
                             size_t alignment);

  virtual bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
};
8.10.2

monotonic_buffer_resource constructor and destructor

[memory.resource.monotonic.buffer.ctor]
explicit monotonic_buffer_resource(memory_resource* upstream);monotonic_buffer_resource(size_t initial_size, memory_resource* upstream);
Requires:
upstream shall be the address of a valid memory resource. initial_size, if specified, shall be greater than zero.
Effects:
Sets upstream_rsrc to upstream and current_buffer to nullptr. If initial_size is specified, sets next_buffer_size to at least initial_size; otherwise sets next_buffer_size to an implementation-defined size.
monotonic_buffer_resource(void* buffer, size_t buffer_size, memory_resource* upstream);
Requires:
upstream shall be the address of a valid memory resource. buffer_size shall be no larger than the number of bytes in buffer.
Effects:
Sets upstream_rsrc to upstream, current_buffer to buffer, and next_buffer_size to initial_size (but not less than 1), then increases next_buffer_size by an implementation-defined growth factor (which need not be integral).
~monotonic_buffer_resource();
Effects:
Calls this->release().
8.10.3

monotonic_buffer_resource members

[memory.resource.monotonic.buffer.mem]
void release();
Effects:
Calls upstream_rsrc->deallocate() as necessary to release all allocated memory.

[ Note: memory is released back to upstream_rsrc even if some blocks that were allocated from this have not been deallocated from this. end note ]

memory_resource* upstream_resource() const;
Returns:
The value of upstream_rsrc.
void* do_allocate(size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
Returns:
A pointer to allocated storage (C++14 §3.7.4.2) with a size of at least bytes. The size and alignment of the allocated memory shall meet the requirements for a class derived from memory_resource (8.5).
Effects:
If the unused space in current_buffer can fit a block with the specified bytes and alignment, then allocate the return block from current_buffer; otherwise set current_buffer to upstream_rsrc->allocate(n, m), where n is not less than max(bytes, next_buffer_size) and m is not less than alignment, and increase next_buffer_size by an implementation-defined growth factor (which need not be integral), then allocate the return block from the newly-allocated current_buffer.
Throws:
Nothing unless upstream_rsrc->allocate() throws.
void do_deallocate(void* p, size_t bytes, size_t alignment);
Effects:
None
Throws:
Nothing
Remarks:
Memory used by this resource increases monotonically until its destruction.
bool do_is_equal(const memory_resource& other) const noexcept;
Returns:
this == dynamic_cast<const monotonic_buffer_resource*>(&other).
8.11

Alias templates using polymorphic memory resources

[memory.resource.aliases]
8.11.1

Header <experimental/string> synopsis

[header.string.synop]
#include <string>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  // basic_string using polymorphic allocator in namespace pmr
  template <class charT, class traits = char_traits<charT>>
   using basic_string =
     std::basic_string<charT, traits, polymorphic_allocator<charT>>;

  // basic_string typedef names using polymorphic allocator in namespace
  // std::experimental::pmr
  typedef basic_string<char> string;
  typedef basic_string<char16_t> u16string;
  typedef basic_string<char32_t> u32string;
  typedef basic_string<wchar_t> wstring;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.2

Header <experimental/deque> synopsis

[header.deque.synop]
#include <deque>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class T>
  using deque = std::deque<T,polymorphic_allocator<T>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.3

Header <experimental/forward_list> synopsis

[header.forward_list.synop]
#include <forward_list>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class T>
  using forward_list =
    std::forward_list<T,polymorphic_allocator<T>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.4

Header <experimental/list> synopsis

[header.list.synop]
#include <list>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class T>
  using list = std::list<T,polymorphic_allocator<T>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.5

Header <experimental/vector> synopsis

[header.vector.synop]
#include <vector>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class T>
  using vector = std::vector<T,polymorphic_allocator<T>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.6

Header <experimental/map> synopsis

[header.map.synop]
#include <map>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class Key, class T, class Compare = less<Key>>
  using map = std::map<Key, T, Compare,
                       polymorphic_allocator<pair<const Key,T>>>;

  template <class Key, class T, class Compare = less<Key>>
  using multimap = std::multimap<Key, T, Compare,
                                 polymorphic_allocator<pair<const Key,T>>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.7

Header <experimental/set> synopsis

[header.set.synop]
#include <set>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class Key, class Compare = less<Key>>
  using set = std::set<Key, Compare,
                       polymorphic_allocator<Key>>;

  template <class Key, class Compare = less<Key>>
  using multiset = std::multiset<Key, Compare,
                                 polymorphic_allocator<Key>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.8

Header <experimental/unordered_map> synopsis

[header.unordered_map.synop]
#include <unordered_map>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class Key, class T,
            class Hash = hash<Key>,
            class Pred = equal_to<Key>>
  using unordered_map =
    std::unordered_map<Key, T, Hash, Pred,
                       polymorphic_allocator<pair<const Key,T>>>;

  template <class Key, class T,
            class Hash = hash<Key>,
            class Pred = equal_to<Key>>
  using unordered_multimap =
    std::unordered_multimap<Key, T, Hash, Pred,
                            polymorphic_allocator<pair<const Key,T>>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.9

Header <experimental/unordered_set> synopsis

[header.unordered_set.synop]
#include <unordered_set>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class Key,
            class Hash = hash<Key>,
            class Pred = equal_to<Key>>
  using unordered_set = std::unordered_set<Key, Hash, Pred,
                                           polymorphic_allocator<Key>>;

  template <class Key,
            class Hash = hash<Key>,
            class Pred = equal_to<Key>>
  using unordered_multiset =
    std::unordered_multiset<Key, Hash, Pred,
                            polymorphic_allocator<Key>>;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
8.11.10

Header <experimental/regex> synopsis

[header.regex.synop]
#include <regex>
#include <exerimental/string>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {
namespace pmr {

  template <class BidirectionalIterator>
  using match_results =
    std::match_results<BidirectionalIterator,
                       polymorphic_allocator<sub_match<BidirectionalIterator>>>;

  typedef match_results<const char*> cmatch;
  typedef match_results<const wchar_t*> wcmatch;
  typedef match_results<string::const_iterator> smatch;
  typedef match_results<wstring::const_iterator> wsmatch;

} // namespace pmr
} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
9

Futures

[futures]
9.1

Header <experimental/future> synopsis

[header.future.synop]
#include <future>

namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    template <class R> class promise;
    template <class R> class promise<R&>;
    template <> class promise<void>;

    template <class R>
    void swap(promise<R>& x, promise<R>& y) noexcept;

    template <class> class packaged_task; // undefined
    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    class packaged_task<R(ArgTypes...)>;

    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    void swap(packaged_task<R(ArgTypes...)>&, packaged_task<R(ArgTypes...)>&) noexcept;

  } // namespace fundamentals_v1
  } // namespace experimental

  template <class R, class Alloc>
  struct uses_allocator<experimental::promise<R>, Alloc>;

  template <class R, class Alloc>
  struct uses_allocator<experimental::packaged_task<R>, Alloc>;

} // namespace std
9.2

Class template promise

[futures.promise]

The specification of all declarations within this sub-clause 9.2 and its sub-clauses are the same as the corresponding declarations, as specified in C++14 §30.6.5, unless explicitly specified otherwise.

namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    template <class R>
    class promise {
    public:
      typedef erased_type allocator_type;

      promise();
      template <class Allocator>
      promise(allocator_arg_t, const Allocator& a);
      promise(promise&& rhs) noexcept;
      promise(const promise& rhs) = delete;
      ~promise();

      promise& operator=(promise&& rhs) noexcept;
      promise& operator=(const promise& rhs) = delete;
      void swap(promise& other) noexcept;

      future<R> get_future();

      void set_value(see below);
      void set_exception(exception_ptr p);

      void set_value_at_thread_exit(const R& r);
      void set_value_at_thread_exit(see below);
      void set_exception_at_thread_exit(exception_ptr p);

      pmr::memory_resource* get_memory_resource();
    };

    template <class R>
    void swap(promise<R>& x, promise<R>& y) noexcept;

  } // namespace fundamentals_v1
  } // namespace experimental

  template <class R, class Alloc>
  struct uses_allocator<experimental::promise<R>, Alloc>;

} // namespace std

When a promise constructor that takes a first argument of type allocator_arg_t is invoked, the second argument is treated as a type-erased allocator (8.3).

9.3

Class template packaged_task

[futures.task]

The specification of all declarations within this sub-clause 9.3 and its sub-clauses are the same as the corresponding declarations, as specified in C++14 §30.6.9, unless explicitly specified otherwise.

namespace std {
  namespace experimental {
  inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    class packaged_task<R(ArgTypes...)> {
    public:
      typedef erased_type allocator_type;

      packaged_task() noexcept;
      template <class F>
      explicit packaged_task(F&& f);
      template <class F, class Allocator>
      explicit packaged_task(allocator_arg_t, const Allocator& a, F&& f);
      ~packaged_task();

      packaged_task(const packaged_task&) = delete;
      packaged_task& operator=(const packaged_task&) = delete;

      packaged_task(packaged_task&& rhs) noexcept;
      packaged_task& operator=(packaged_task&& rhs) noexcept;
      void swap(packaged_task& other) noexcept;

      bool valid() const noexcept;

      future<R> get_future();

      void operator()(ArgTypes... );
      void make_ready_at_thread_exit(ArgTypes...);

      void reset();

      pmr::memory_resource* get_memory_resource();
    };

    template <class R, class... ArgTypes>
    void swap(packaged_task<R(ArgTypes...)>&, packaged_task<R(ArgTypes...)>&) noexcept;

  } // namespace fundamentals_v1
  } // namespace experimental

  template <class R, class Alloc>
  struct uses_allocator<experimental::packaged_task<R>, Alloc>;

} // namespace std

When a packaged_task constructor that takes a first argument of type allocator_arg_t is invoked, the second argument is treated as a type-erased allocator (8.3).

10

Algorithms library

[algorithms]
10.1

Header <experimental/algorithm> synopsis

[header.algorithm.synop]
#include <algorithm>

namespace std {
namespace experimental {
inline namespace fundamentals_v1 {

  template<class ForwardIterator, class Searcher>
  ForwardIterator search(ForwardIterator first, ForwardIterator last,
                         const Searcher& searcher);

  template<class PopulationIterator, class SampleIterator,
           class Distance, class UniformRandomNumberGenerator>
  SampleIterator sample(PopulationIterator first, PopulationIterator last,
                        SampleIterator out, Distance n,
                        UniformRandomNumberGenerator&& g);

} // namespace fundamentals_v1
} // namespace experimental
} // namespace std
10.2

Search

[alg.search]
template<class ForwardIterator, class Searcher>
ForwardIterator search(ForwardIterator first, ForwardIterator last,
                       const Searcher& searcher);
Effects:
Equivalent to return searcher(first, last).
Remarks:
Searcher need not meet the CopyConstructible requirements.
10.3

Shuffling and sampling

[alg.random.sample]
template<class PopulationIterator, class SampleIterator,
         class Distance, class UniformRandomNumberGenerator>
SampleIterator sample(PopulationIterator first, PopulationIterator last,
                      SampleIterator out, Distance n,
                      UniformRandomNumberGenerator&& g);
Requires:
  • PopulationIterator shall meet the requirements of an InputIterator type.
  • SampleIterator shall meet the requirements of an OutputIterator type.
  • SampleIterator shall meet the additional requirements of a RandomAccessIterator type unless PopulationIterator meets the additional requirements of a ForwardIterator type.
  • PopulationIterator's value type shall be writable to out.
  • Distance shall be an integer type.
  • UniformRandomNumberGenerator shall meet the requirements of a uniform random number generator type (C++14 §26.5.1.3) whose return type is convertible to Distance.
  • out shall not be in the range [first, last).
Effects:
Copies min(last−first, n) elements (the sample) from [first, last) (the population) to out such that each possible sample has equal probability of appearance. [ Note: Algorithms that obtain such effects include selection sampling and reservoir sampling. end note ]
Returns:
The end of the resulting sample range.
Complexity:
O(n).
Remarks:
  • Stable if and only if PopulationIterator meets the requirements of a ForwardIterator type.
  • To the extent that the implementation of this function makes use of random numbers, the object g shall serve as the implementation’s source of randomness.