std::common_with
<concepts>
concept common_with =
std::same_as <std::common_type_t <T, U>, std::common_type_t <U, T>> &&
requires {
static_cast<std::common_type_t <T, U>>(std::declval <T>());
static_cast<std::common_type_t <T, U>>(std::declval <U>());
} &&
std::common_reference_with <
std::add_lvalue_reference_t <const T>,
std::add_lvalue_reference_t <const U>> &&
std::common_reference_with <
std::add_lvalue_reference_t <std::common_type_t <T, U>>,
std::common_reference_t <
std::add_lvalue_reference_t <const T>,
The concept common_with<T, U>
specifies that two types T
and U
share a common type (as computed by std::common_type_t ) to which both can be converted.
[edit] Semantic requirements
T and U model std::common_with<T, U> only if, given equality-preserving expressions t1
, t2
, u1
and u2
such that decltype((t1)) and decltype((t2)) are both T
and decltype((u1)) and decltype((u2)) are both U
,
- std::common_type_t <T, U>(t1) equals std::common_type_t <T, U>(t2) if and only if
t1
equalst2
; and - std::common_type_t <T, U>(u1) equals std::common_type_t <T, U>(u2) if and only if
u1
equalsu2
.
In other words, the conversion to the common type must preserve equality.
[edit] Equality preservation
Expressions declared in requires expressions of the standard library concepts are required to be equality-preserving (except where stated otherwise).
[edit] References
- C++23 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2024):
- 18.4.6 Concept
common_with
[concept.common]
- 18.4.6 Concept
- C++20 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2020):
- 18.4.6 Concept
common_with
[concept.common]
- 18.4.6 Concept