std::expected
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <expected>
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||
template< class T, class E > class expected; |
(1) | (since C++23) |
template< class T, class E > requires std::is_void_v<T> |
(2) | (since C++23) |
The class template std::expected
provides a way to represent either of two values: an expected value of type T
, or an unexpected value of type E
. std::expected
is never valueless.
1) The main template. Contains the expected or unexpected value within its own storage. No dynamic memory allocation takes place.
2) The void partial specialization. Represents an expected void value or contains the unexpected value within its own storage. No dynamic memory allocation takes place.
A program is ill-formed if it instantiates an expected
with a reference type, a function type, or a specialization of std::unexpected. In addition, T
must not be std::in_place_t or std::unexpect_t.
Contents |
Template parameters
T | - | the type of the expected value. The type must either be (possibly cv-qualified) void, or meet the Destructible requirements (in particular, array and reference types are not allowed). |
E | - | the type of the unexpected value. The type must meet the Destructible requirements, and must be a valid template argument for std::unexpected (in particular, arrays, non-object types, and cv-qualified types are not allowed). |
Member types
Member type | Definition |
value_type
|
T
|
error_type
|
E
|
unexpected_type
|
std::unexpected<E>
|
Member alias templates
Type | Definition |
rebind<U> | std::expected<U, error_type> |
Data members
Member | Definition |
bool has_val
|
whether the expected object currently represents the expected value(exposition-only member object*) |
T val (main template only)
|
the expected value (exposition-only variant member object*) |
E unex
|
the unexpected value (exposition-only variant member object*) |
Member functions
constructs the expected object (public member function) | |
destroys the expected object, along with its contained value (public member function) | |
assigns contents (public member function) | |
Observers | |
accesses the expected value (public member function) | |
checks whether the object contains an expected value (public member function) | |
returns the expected value (public member function) | |
returns the unexpected value (public member function) | |
returns the expected value if present, another value otherwise (public member function) | |
returns the unexpected value if present, another value otherwise (public member function) | |
Monadic operations | |
returns the result of the given function on the expected value if it exists; otherwise, returns the expected itself (public member function) | |
returns an expected containing the transformed expected value if it exists; otherwise, returns the expected itself (public member function) | |
returns the expected itself if it contains an expected value; otherwise, returns the result of the given function on the unexpected value (public member function) | |
returns the expected itself if it contains an expected value; otherwise, returns an expected containing the transformed unexpected value (public member function) | |
Modifiers | |
constructs the expected value in-place (public member function) | |
exchanges the contents (public member function) |
Non-member functions
(C++23) |
compares expected objects (function template) |
(C++23) |
specializes the std::swap algorithm (function) |
Helper classes
(C++23) |
represented as an unexpected value (class template) |
(C++23) |
exception indicating checked access to an expected that contains an unexpected value (class template) |
(C++23) |
in-place construction tag for unexpected value in expected (tag) |
Notes
Types with the same functionality are called Result
in Rust and Either
in Haskell.
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_expected |
202202L | (C++23) | class template std::expected and associated helper classes
|
202211L | (C++23) | Monadic functions for std::expected
|
Example
Run this code
#include <cmath> #include <expected> #include <iomanip> #include <iostream> #include <string_view> enum class parse_error { invalid_input, overflow }; auto parse_number(std::string_view& str) -> std::expected<double, parse_error> { const char* begin = str.data(); char* end; double retval = std::strtod(begin, &end); if (begin == end) return std::unexpected(parse_error::invalid_input); else if (std::isinf(retval)) return std::unexpected(parse_error::overflow); str.remove_prefix(end - begin); return retval; } int main() { auto process = [](std::string_view str) { std::cout << "str: " << std::quoted(str) << ", "; if (const auto num = parse_number(str); num.has_value()) std::cout << "value: " << *num << '\n'; // If num did not have a value, dereferencing num // would cause an undefined behavior, and // num.value() would throw std::bad_expected_access. // num.value_or(123) uses specified default value 123. else if (num.error() == parse_error::invalid_input) std::cout << "error: invalid input\n"; else if (num.error() == parse_error::overflow) std::cout << "error: overflow\n"; else std::cout << "unexpected!\n"; // or invoke std::unreachable(); }; for (auto src : {"42", "42abc", "meow", "inf"}) process(src); }
Output:
str: "42", value: 42 str: "42abc", value: 42 str: "meow", error: invalid input str: "inf", error: overflow
References
- C++23 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2024):
- 22.8 Expected objects [expected]
See also
(C++17) |
a type-safe discriminated union (class template) |
(C++17) |
a wrapper that may or may not hold an object (class template) |