Defined in header <algorithm> | ||
---|---|---|
template< class T, class U > constexpr auto compare_3way( const T& a, const U& b ); | (since C++20) |
Compares two values using three-way comparison and produces a result of the strongest applicable comparison category type.
In detail:
a <=> b
is well-formed, returns its result a == b
and a < b
are both well-formed and convertible to bool
, a == b
equals true
, returns std::strong_ordering::equal
a < b
equals true
, returns std::strong_ordering::less
std::strong_ordering::greater
a == b
is well-formed and convertible to bool
(but a < b
is not), a == b
equals true
, returns std::strong_equality::equal
std::strong_equality::nonequal
a <=> b
nor a == b
are well-formed), the function is defined as deleted. a, b | - | the values to compare |
As defined above.
This function is useful in generic programming, since it uses <
and ==
as fallbacks when <=>
is not available.
#include <iostream> #include <compare> #include <algorithm> //does not support <=> struct Rational_1 { int num; int den; // > 0 }; inline constexpr bool operator<(Rational_1 lhs, Rational_1 rhs) { return lhs.num * rhs.den < rhs.num * lhs.den; } inline constexpr bool operator==(Rational_1 lhs, Rational_1 rhs) { return lhs.num * rhs.den == rhs.num * lhs.den; } //supports <=> struct Rational_2 { int num; int den; // > 0 }; inline constexpr std::weak_ordering operator<=>(Rational_2 lhs, Rational_2 rhs) { return lhs.num * rhs.den <=> rhs.num * lhs.den; } void print(std::weak_ordering value) { if (value == 0) std::cout << "equal"; else if (value < 0) std::cout << "less"; else std::cout << "greater"; std::cout << "\n"; } int main() { Rational_1 a{1,2}; Rational_1 b{3,4}; // print(a <=> b); //doesn't work print(std::compare_3way(a,b)); //works, defaults to < and == Rational_2 c{6,5}; Rational_2 d{8,7}; print(c <=> d); //works print(std::compare_3way(c,d)); //works }
Output:
less greater greater
(C++20) | compares two ranges using three-way comparison (function template) |
(C++20) | the result type of 3-way comparison that supports only equality/inequality and is substitutable (class) |
(C++20) | the result type of 3-way comparison that supports only equality/inequality and is not substitutable (class) |
(C++20) | the result type of 3-way comparison that supports all 6 operators and is substitutable (class) |
(C++20) | the result type of 3-way comparison that supports all 6 operators and is not substitutable (class) |
(C++20) | the result type of 3-way comparison that supports all 6 operators, is not substitutable, and allows incomparable values (class) |
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