operator==(std::expected)
requires (!std::is_void_v <T2>)
friend constexpr bool operator==( const expected& lhs,
friend constexpr bool operator==( const expected& lhs,
friend constexpr bool operator==( const expected& lhs, const T2& val );
requires std::is_void_v <T2>
friend constexpr bool operator==( const expected& lhs,
friend constexpr bool operator==( const expected& lhs,
Performs comparison operations on std::expected objects.
If any of the following expressions is ill-formed, or its result is not convertible to bool, the program is ill-formed:
(until C++26)This overload participates in overload resolution only if all following expressions is well-formed, and their results are convertible to bool:
(since C++26)- *lhs == *rhs
- lhs.error() == rhs.error()
If the expression lhs.error() == unex.error() is ill-formed, or its result is not convertible to bool, the program is ill-formed.
(until C++26)This overload participates in overload resolution only if the expression lhs.error() == unex.error() is well-formed, and its result is convertible to bool.
(since C++26)If the expression *lhs == val is ill-formed, or its result is not convertible to bool, the program is ill-formed.
(until C++26)This overload participates in overload resolution only if all following conditions are satisfied:
-
T2
is not a specialization of std::expected. - The expression *lhs == val is well-formed, and its result is convertible to bool.
If the expression lhs.error() == rhs.error() is ill-formed, or its result is not convertible to bool, the program is ill-formed.
(until C++26)This overload participates in overload resolution only if the expression lhs.error() == rhs.error() is well-formed, and its result is convertible to bool.
(since C++26)If the expression lhs.error() == unex.error() is ill-formed, or its result is not convertible to bool, the program is ill-formed.
(until C++26)This overload participates in overload resolution only if the expression lhs.error() == unex.error() is well-formed, and its result is convertible to bool.
(since C++26)These functions are not visible to ordinary unqualified or qualified lookup, and can only be found by argument-dependent lookup when std::expected<T, E>
is an associated class of the arguments.
The !=
operator is synthesized from operator==
.
[edit] Parameters
[edit] Return value
(lhs.has_value() ? *lhs == *rhs : lhs.error() == rhs.error())
lhs.has_value() || static_cast<bool>(lhs.error() == rhs.error())
[edit] Exceptions
Throws when and what the comparison throws.
[edit] Notes
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_constrained_equality |
202411L |
(C++26) | constrained comparison operators for std::expected |
[edit] Example
#include <expected> #include <iostream> #include <string_view> using namespace std::string_view_literals; int main() { auto x1{"\N{GREEN HEART}"sv}; auto x2{"\N{CROSS MARK}"sv}; std::expected <std::string_view, int> e1{x1}, e2{x1}, e3{x2}; std::unexpected u1{13}; std::cout << "Overload (1):\n" << e1.value() << (e1 == e2 ? " == " : " != ") << *e2 << '\n' << e1.value() << (e1 != e3 ? " != " : " == ") << *e3 << "\n\n"; std::cout << "Overload (2):\n" << e1.value() << (e1 == u1 ? " == " : " != ") << u1.error() << '\n'; e1 = std::unexpected {13}; std::cout << e1.error() << (e1 == u1 ? " == " : " != ") << u1.error() << '\n'; e1 = std::unexpected {31}; std::cout << e1.error() << (e1 != u1 ? " != " : " == ") << u1.error() << '\n'; std::cout << "Overload (3):\n" << *e1 << (e1 == x1 ? " == " : " != ") << x1 << '\n' << *e1 << (e1 != x2 ? " != " : " == ") << x2 << "\n\n"; }
Output:
Overload (1): 💚 == 💚 💚 != ❌ Overload (2): 💚 != 13 13 == 13 31 != 13 Overload (3): 💚 == 💚 💚 != ❌