std::char_traits<char>::eq/lt, std::char_traits<wchar_t>::eq/lt, std::char_traits<char8_t>::eq/lt, std::char_traits<char16_t>::eq/lt, std::char_traits<char32_t>::eq/lt
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 < cpp | string | char traits 
 
 
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std::char_traits 
 
 Member functions
char_traits::eqchar_traits::lt
static bool eq( char_type a, char_type b );
 (1) 
 (constexpr since C++11)(noexcept since C++11)
static bool lt( char_type a, char_type b );
 (2) 
 (constexpr since C++11)(noexcept since C++11)
Compares two characters.
1) Compares a and b for equality, behaves identically to
-  static_cast<unsigned char>(a) == static_cast<unsigned char>(b), if char_typeis char,
- a == b otherwise.
2) Compares a and b in such a way that they are totally ordered, behaves identically to
-  static_cast<unsigned char>(a) < static_cast<unsigned char>(b), if char_typeis char,
- a < b otherwise.
See CharTraits for the general requirements on character traits for X::eq and X::lt.
[edit] Parameters
 a, b
 -
 character values to compare
[edit] Return value
1) true if a and b are equal, false otherwise.
2) true if a is less than b, false otherwise.
[edit] Complexity
Constant.
[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 467 | C++98 | for std::char_traits <char>, the semantics of eq()andlt()are the same as the built-in == and < on char respectively[1] | changed to built-in == and < on unsigned char | 
- ↑ Most implementations call std::memcmp() for efficiency, which interprets the data as arrays of unsigned char. If char is signed on such implementations, std::char_traits <char> fails to satisfy the requirements of CharTraits.