std::ranges::clamp
Defined in header <algorithm>
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Call signature |
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template< class T, class Proj = std::identity, std::indirect_strict_weak_order<std::projected<const T*, Proj>> Comp = |
(since C++20) | |
If the value of v is within [
lo,
hi]
, returns v; otherwise returns the nearest boundary.
The behavior is undefined if lo is greater than hi.
The function-like entities described on this page are niebloids, that is:
- Explicit template argument lists cannot be specified when calling any of them.
- None of them are visible to argument-dependent lookup.
- When any of them are found by normal unqualified lookup as the name to the left of the function-call operator, argument-dependent lookup is inhibited.
In practice, they may be implemented as function objects, or with special compiler extensions.
Contents |
Parameters
v | - | the value to clamp |
lo, hi | - | the boundaries to clamp v to |
comp | - | the comparison to apply to the projected elements |
proj | - | the projection to apply to v, lo and hi |
Return value
Reference to lo if the projected value of v is less than the projected value of lo, reference to hi if the projected value of hi is less than the projected value of v, otherwise reference to v.
Complexity
At most two comparisons and three applications of the projection.
Possible implementation
struct clamp_fn { template<class T, class Proj = std::identity, std::indirect_strict_weak_order<std::projected<const T*, Proj>> Comp = std::ranges::less> constexpr const T& operator()(const T& v, const T& lo, const T& hi, Comp comp = {}, Proj proj = {}) const { auto&& pv = std::invoke(proj, v); if (std::invoke(comp, std::forward<decltype(pv)>(pv), std::invoke(proj, lo))) return lo; if (std::invoke(comp, std::invoke(proj, hi), std::forward<decltype(pv)>(pv))) return hi; return v; } }; inline constexpr clamp_fn clamp; |
Notes
std::ranges::clamp
by reference produces a dangling reference if one of the parameters is a temporary and that parameter is returned:
int n = -1; const int& r = std::ranges::clamp(n, 0, 255); // r is dangling
If v compares equivalent to either bound, returns a reference to v, not the bound.
This function should not be used with both a projection the returns by value and comparator that takes arguments by value unless a move from the projection result type to the comparator parameter type is equivalent to a copy. If the comparison via std::invoke would change the result of projection, the behavior is undefined due to the semantic requirements of std::regular_invocable
(subsumed by std::indirect_strict_weak_order).
The standard requires that the value category of the result of the projection be preserved, and proj can only be called on v once, which means that a projection result that is a prvalue has to be cached and moved from twice for the two calls to the comparator.
- libstdc++ does not conform to this and always passes the projection result as an lvalue.
- libc++ used to run the projection twice, which was corrected in Clang 18.
- MSVC STL used to run the projection twice, which was corrected in VS 2022 17.2.
Example
#include <algorithm> #include <cstdint> #include <iomanip> #include <iostream> #include <string> using namespace std::literals; namespace ranges = std::ranges; int main() { std::cout << "[raw] [" << INT8_MIN << ',' << INT8_MAX << "] " "[0" << ',' << UINT8_MAX << "]\n"; for (int const v : {-129, -128, -1, 0, 42, 127, 128, 255, 256}) std::cout << std::setw(4) << v << std::setw(11) << ranges::clamp(v, INT8_MIN, INT8_MAX) << std::setw(8) << ranges::clamp(v, 0, UINT8_MAX) << '\n'; std::cout << std::string(23, '-') << '\n'; // Projection function const auto stoi = [](std::string s) { return std::stoi(s); }; // Same as above, but with strings for (std::string const v : {"-129", "-128", "-1", "0", "42", "127", "128", "255", "256"}) std::cout << std::setw(4) << v << std::setw(11) << ranges::clamp(v, "-128"s, "127"s, {}, stoi) << std::setw(8) << ranges::clamp(v, "0"s, "255"s, {}, stoi) << '\n'; }
Output:
[raw] [-128,127] [0,255] -129 -128 0 -128 -128 0 -1 -1 0 0 0 0 42 42 42 127 127 127 128 127 128 255 127 255 256 127 255 ----------------------- -129 -128 0 -128 -128 0 -1 -1 0 0 0 0 42 42 42 127 127 127 128 127 128 255 127 255 256 127 255
See also
(C++20) |
returns the smaller of the given values (niebloid) |
(C++20) |
returns the greater of the given values (niebloid) |
(C++20) |
checks if an integer value is in the range of a given integer type (function template) |
(C++17) |
clamps a value between a pair of boundary values (function template) |