std::tie
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <tuple>
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template< class... Types > std::tuple<Types&...> tie( Types&... args ) noexcept; |
(since C++11) (constexpr since C++14) |
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Creates a tuple of lvalue references to its arguments or instances of std::ignore.
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
args | - | zero or more lvalue arguments to construct the tuple from. |
[edit] Return value
A std::tuple object containing lvalue references.
[edit] Possible implementation
template <typename... Args> constexpr // since C++14 std::tuple<Args&...> tie(Args&... args) noexcept { return {args...}; } |
[edit] Notes
std::tie
may be used to unpack a std::pair because std::tuple has a converting assignment from pairs:
bool result; std::tie(std::ignore, result) = set.insert(value);
[edit] Example
1) std::tie
can be used to introduce lexicographical comparison to a struct or to unpack a tuple;
2) std::tie
can work with structured bindings:
Run this code
#include <cassert> #include <iostream> #include <set> #include <string> #include <tuple> struct S { int n; std::string s; float d; friend bool operator<(const S& lhs, const S& rhs) noexcept { // compares lhs.n to rhs.n, // then lhs.s to rhs.s, // then lhs.d to rhs.d // in that order, first non-equal result is returned // or false if all elements are equal return std::tie(lhs.n, lhs.s, lhs.d) < std::tie(rhs.n, rhs.s, rhs.d); } }; int main() { // Lexicographical comparison demo: std::set<S> set_of_s; S value{42, "Test", 3.14}; std::set<S>::iterator iter; bool is_inserted; // Unpack a pair: std::tie(iter, is_inserted) = set_of_s.insert(value); assert(is_inserted); // std::tie and structured bindings: auto position = [](int w) { return std::tuple(1 * w, 2 * w); }; auto [x, y] = position(1); assert(x == 1 && y == 2); std::tie(x, y) = position(2); // reuse x, y with tie assert(x == 2 && y == 4); // Implicit conversions are permitted: std::tuple<char, short> coordinates(6, 9); std::tie(x, y) = coordinates; assert(x == 6 && y == 9); }
[edit] See also
Structured binding (C++17) | binds the specified names to sub-objects or tuple elements of the initializer |
(C++11) |
creates a tuple object of the type defined by the argument types (function template) |
(C++11) |
creates a tuple of forwarding references (function template) |
(C++11) |
creates a tuple by concatenating any number of tuples (function template) |
(C++11) |
placeholder to skip an element when unpacking a tuple using tie (constant) |