C++ named requirements: BasicFormatter (since C++20)
From cppreference.com
BasicFormatter is a type that abstracts formatting operations for a given formatting argument type and character type. Specializations of std::formatter are required to meet the requirements of BasicFormatter.
A BasicFormatter is a Formatter if it is able to format both const and non-const arguments.
[edit] Requirements
A type satisfies BasicFormatter if it is semiregular, meaning it satisfies:
And, given the following types and values, the expressions shown in the table below are valid and have the indicated semantics:
Type | Definition |
CharT
|
a character type |
Arg
|
a formatting argument type |
Formatter
|
a Formatter type for types Arg and CharT
|
OutputIt
|
a LegacyOutputIterator type |
ParseCtx
|
std::basic_format_parse_context<CharT> |
FmtCtx
|
std::basic_format_context<OutputIt, CharT> |
Value | Definition |
f | a value of type (possibly const-qualified) Formatter
|
g | a value of type Formatter
|
arg | an lvalue of type Arg
|
t | a value of type convertible to (possibly const-qualified) Arg
|
parse_ctx | an lvalue of type ParseCtx satisfying all following conditions:
|
fmt_ctx | an lvalue of type FmtCtx
|
Expression | Return type | Semantics |
---|---|---|
g.parse(parse_ctx) | ParseCtx::iterator
|
|
f.format(arg, fmt_ctx) | FmtCtx::iterator
|
|
- ↑ This allows formatters to emit meaningful error messages.
[edit] Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 3892 | C++20 | the value of pc.begin() was unclear if format-spec is not present | made clear |