operator+,-,*,/,%,&,|,^,<<,>>,&&,|| (std::valarray)
Defined in header <valarray>
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template< class T > std::valarray<T> operator+ ( const std::valarray<T>& lhs, const std::valarray<T>& rhs ); |
(1) | |
template< class T > std::valarray<T> operator+ ( const typename std::valarray<T>::value_type & val, |
(2) | |
template< class T > std::valarray<T> operator+ ( const std::valarray<T>& lhs, |
(3) | |
Apply binary operators to each element of two valarrays, or a valarray and a value.
Contents |
Parameters
rhs | - | a numeric array |
lhs | - | a numeric array |
val | - | a value of type T
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Return value
A valarray with the same size as the parameter.
Note
The behaviour is undefined when the two arguments are valarrays with different sizes.
The function can be implemented with the return type different from std::valarray. In this case, the replacement type has the following properties:
- All const member functions of std::valarray are provided.
- std::valarray, std::slice_array, std::gslice_array, std::mask_array and std::indirect_array can be constructed from the replacement type.
- For every function taking a const std::valarray<T>& except begin() and end()(since C++11), identical functions taking the replacement types shall be added;
- For every function taking two const std::valarray<T>& arguments, identical functions taking every combination of const std::valarray<T>& and replacement types shall be added.
- The return type does not add more than two levels of template nesting over the most deeply-nested argument type.
Example
Finds real roots of multiple Quadratic equations.
#include <cstddef> #include <iostream> #include <valarray> int main() { std::valarray<double> a(1, 8); std::valarray<double> b{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8}; std::valarray<double> c = -b; // literals must also be of type T until LWG3074 (double in this case) std::valarray<double> d = std::sqrt(b * b - 4.0 * a * c); std::valarray<double> x1 = 2.0 * c / (-b + d); std::valarray<double> x2 = 2.0 * c / (-b - d); std::cout << "quadratic equation: root 1: root 2: b: c:\n"; for (std::size_t i = 0; i < a.size(); ++i) std::cout << a[i] << "\u00B7x\u00B2 + " << b[i] << "\u00B7x + " << c[i] << " = 0 " << std::fixed << x1[i] << " " << x2[i] << std::defaultfloat << " " << -x1[i] - x2[i] << " " << x1[i] * x2[i] << '\n'; }
Output:
quadratic equation: root 1: root 2: b: c: 1·x² + 1·x + -1 = 0 -1.618034 0.618034 1 -1 1·x² + 2·x + -2 = 0 -2.732051 0.732051 2 -2 1·x² + 3·x + -3 = 0 -3.791288 0.791288 3 -3 1·x² + 4·x + -4 = 0 -4.828427 0.828427 4 -4 1·x² + 5·x + -5 = 0 -5.854102 0.854102 5 -5 1·x² + 6·x + -6 = 0 -6.872983 0.872983 6 -6 1·x² + 7·x + -7 = 0 -7.887482 0.887482 7 -7 1·x² + 8·x + -8 = 0 -8.898979 0.898979 8 -8
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
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LWG 3074 | C++98 | T is deduced from both the scalar and the valarray for (2,3), disallowing mixed-type calls
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only deduce T from the valarray
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See also
applies a unary arithmetic operator to each element of the valarray (public member function) | |
applies compound assignment operator to each element of the valarray (public member function) |