std::from_chars_result
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <charconv>
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struct from_chars_result; |
(since C++17) | |
std::from_chars_result
is the return type of std::from_chars. It has no base classes, and only has the following members.
Contents |
[edit] Data members
Member name | Definition |
ptr |
a pointer of type const char* (public member object) |
ec |
an error code of type std::errc (public member object) |
[edit] Member and friend functions
operator==(std::from_chars_result)
friend bool operator==( const from_chars_result&, const from_chars_result& ) = default; |
(since C++20) | |
Compares the two arguments using default comparisons (which uses operator== to compare ptr
and ec
respectively).
This function is not visible to ordinary unqualified or qualified lookup, and can only be found by argument-dependent lookup when std::from_chars_result is an associated class of the arguments.
The !=
operator is synthesized from operator==
.
operator bool
constexpr explicit operator bool() const noexcept; |
(since C++26) | |
Checks whether the conversion is successful. Returns ec == std::errc{}.
[edit] Notes
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_to_chars |
201611L | (C++17) | Elementary string conversions (std::to_chars, std::from_chars) |
202306L | (C++26) | Testing for success or failure of <charconv> functions |
[edit] Example
Run this code
#include <cassert> #include <charconv> #include <iomanip> #include <iostream> #include <optional> #include <string_view> #include <system_error> int main() { for (std::string_view const str : {"1234", "15 foo", "bar", " 42", "5000000000"}) { std::cout << "String: " << std::quoted(str) << ". "; int result{}; auto [ptr, ec] = std::from_chars(str.data(), str.data() + str.size(), result); if (ec == std::errc()) std::cout << "Result: " << result << ", ptr -> " << std::quoted(ptr) << '\n'; else if (ec == std::errc::invalid_argument) std::cout << "This is not a number.\n"; else if (ec == std::errc::result_out_of_range) std::cout << "This number is larger than an int.\n"; } // C++23's constexpr from_char demo / C++26's operator bool() demo: auto to_int = [](std::string_view s) -> std::optional<int> { int value{}; #if __cpp_lib_to_chars >= 202306L if (std::from_chars(s.data(), s.data() + s.size(), value)) #else if (std::from_chars(s.data(), s.data() + s.size(), value).ec == std::errc{}) #endif return value; else return std::nullopt; }; assert(to_int("42") == 42); assert(to_int("foo") == std::nullopt); #if __cpp_lib_constexpr_charconv and __cpp_lib_optional >= 202106 static_assert(to_int("42") == 42); static_assert(to_int("foo") == std::nullopt); #endif }
Output:
String: "1234". Result: 1234, ptr -> "" String: "15 foo". Result: 15, ptr -> " foo" String: "bar". This is not a number. String: " 42". This is not a number. String: "5000000000". This number is larger than an int.
[edit] See also
(C++17) |
converts a character sequence to an integer or floating-point value (function) |