Compare commits

...

1 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
955cf95601 This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create branch 'SPIRIT_1_6'.
[SVN r23968]
2004-07-23 02:16:28 +00:00
34 changed files with 0 additions and 4264 deletions

View File

@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
project boost/doc ;
import boostbook : boostbook ;
boostbook function-doc : function.xml ;

View File

@ -1,156 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<section id="function.faq" last-revision="$Date$">
<title>Frequently Asked Questions</title>
<qandaset>
<qandaentry>
<question><para>Why can't I compare
<classname>boost::function</classname> objects with
<code>operator==</code> or
<code>operator!=</code>?</para></question>
<answer>
<para>Comparison between <classname>boost::function</classname>
objects cannot be implemented "well", and therefore will not be
implemented. The typical semantics requested for <code>f ==
g</code> given <classname>boost::function</classname> objects
<code>f</code> and <code>g</code> are:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><simpara>If <code>f</code> and <code>g</code>
store function objects of the same type, use that type's
<code>operator==</code> to compare
them.</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>If <code>f</code> and <code>g</code>
store function objects of different types, return
<code>false</code>.</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>The problem occurs when the type of the function objects
stored by both <code>f</code> and <code>g</code> doesn't have an
<code>operator==</code>: we would like the expression <code>f ==
g</code> to fail to compile, as occurs with, e.g., the standard
containers. However, this is not implementable for
<classname>boost::function</classname> because it necessarily
"erases" some type information after it has been assigned a
function object, so it cannot try to call
<code>operator==</code> later: it must either find a way to call
<code>operator==</code> now, or it will never be able to call it
later. Note, for instance, what happens if you try to put a
<code>float</code> value into a
<classname>boost::function</classname> object: you will get an
error at the assignment operator or constructor, not in
<code>operator()</code>, because the function-call expression
must be bound in the constructor or assignment operator.</para>
<para>The most promising approach is to find a method of
determining if <code>operator==</code> can be called for a
particular type, and then supporting it only when it is
available; in other situations, an exception would be
thrown. However, to date there is no known way to detect if an
arbitrary operator expression <code>f == g</code> is suitably
defined. The best solution known has the following undesirable
qualities:</para>
<orderedlist>
<listitem><simpara>Fails at compile-time for objects where
<code>operator==</code> is not accessible (e.g., because it is
<code>private</code>).</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Fails at compile-time if calling
<code>operator==</code> is ambiguous.</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Appears to be correct if the
<code>operator==</code> declaration is correct, even though
<code>operator==</code> may not compile.</simpara></listitem>
</orderedlist>
<para>All of these problems translate into failures in the
<classname>boost::function</classname> constructors or
assignment operator, <emphasis>even if the user never invokes
operator==</emphasis>. We can't do that to users.</para>
<para>The other option is to place the burden on users that want
to use <code>operator==</code>, e.g., by providing an
<code>is_equality_comparable</code> trait they may
specialize. This is a workable solution, but is dangerous in
practice, because forgetting to specialize the trait will result
in unexpected exceptions being thrown from
<classname>boost::function</classname>'s
<code>operator==</code>. This essentially negates the usefulness
of <code>operator==</code> in the context in which it is most
desired: multitarget callbacks. The
<libraryname>Signals</libraryname> library has a way around
this.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question><para>I see void pointers; is this [mess] type safe?</para></question>
<answer>
<para>Yes, <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> is type
safe even though it uses void pointers and pointers to functions
returning void and taking no arguments. Essentially, all type
information is encoded in the functions that manage and invoke
function pointers and function objects. Only these functions are
instantiated with the exact type that is pointed to by the void
pointer or pointer to void function. The reason that both are required
is that one may cast between void pointers and object pointers safely
or between different types of function pointers (provided you don't
invoke a function pointer with the wrong type). </para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question><para>Why are there workarounds for void returns? C++ allows them!</para></question>
<answer><para>Void returns are permitted by the C++ standard, as in this code snippet:
<programlisting>void f();
void g() { return f(); }</programlisting>
</para>
<para> This is a valid usage of <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> because void returns are not used. With void returns, we would attempting to compile ill-formed code similar to:
<programlisting>int f();
void g() { return f(); }</programlisting>
</para>
<para> In essence, not using void returns allows
<computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> to swallow a return value. This is
consistent with allowing the user to assign and invoke functions and
function objects with parameters that don't exactly match.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question><para>Why (function) cloning?</para></question>
<answer>
<para>In November and December of 2000, the issue of cloning
vs. reference counting was debated at length and it was decided
that cloning gave more predictable semantics. I won't rehash the
discussion here, but if it cloning is incorrect for a particular
application a reference-counting allocator could be used.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question><para>How much overhead does a call through <code><classname>boost::function</classname></code> incur?</para></question>
<answer>
<para>The cost of <code>boost::function</code> can be reasonably
consistently measured at around 20ns +/- 10 ns on a modern >2GHz
platform versus directly inlining the code.</para>
<para>However, the performance of your application may benefit
from or be disadvantaged by <code>boost::function</code>
depending on how your C++ optimiser optimises. Similar to a
standard function pointer, differences of order of 10% have been
noted to the benefit or disadvantage of using
<code>boost::function</code> to call a function that contains a
tight loop depending on your compilation circumstances.</para>
<para>[Answer provided by Matt Hurd. See <ulink url="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.boost.devel/33278"/>]</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
</section>

View File

@ -1,60 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<library name="Function" dirname="function" id="function"
last-revision="$Date$"
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
<libraryinfo>
<author>
<firstname>Douglas</firstname>
<surname>Gregor</surname>
<email>gregod@cs.rpi.edu</email>
</author>
<copyright>
<year>2001</year>
<year>2002</year>
<year>2003</year>
<holder>Douglas Gregor</holder>
</copyright>
<legalnotice>
<para>Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost
Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file
<filename>LICENSE_1_0.txt</filename> or copy at <ulink
url="http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt">http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt</ulink>)</para>
</legalnotice>
<librarypurpose>Function object wrappers for deferred calls or callbacks</librarypurpose>
<librarycategory name="category:higher-order"/>
</libraryinfo>
<title>Boost.Function</title>
<section id="function.intro">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>The Boost.Function library contains a family of class templates
that are function object wrappers. The notion is similar to a
generalized callback. It shares features with function pointers in
that both define a call interface (e.g., a function taking two integer
arguments and returning a floating-point value) through which some
implementation can be called, and the implementation that is invoked
may change throughout the course of the program.</para>
<para> Generally, any place in which a function pointer would be used
to defer a call or make a callback, Boost.Function can be used instead
to allow the user greater flexibility in the implementation of the
target. Targets can be any 'compatible' function object (or function
pointer), meaning that the arguments to the interface designated by
Boost.Function can be converted to the arguments of the target
function object.</para>
</section>
<xi:include href="history.xml"/>
<xi:include href="tutorial.xml"/>
<xi:include href="reference.xml"/>
<xi:include href="faq.xml"/>
<xi:include href="misc.xml"/>
<xi:include href="tests.xml"/>
</library>

View File

@ -1,87 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<section id="function.history" last-revision="$Date$">
<title>History &amp; Compatibility Notes</title>
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><para><emphasis role="bold">Version 1.30.0</emphasis>: </para>
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><para>All features deprecated in version 1.29.0 have
been removed from Boost.Function.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><code><classname>boost::function</classname></code>
and <code><classname>boost::functionN</classname></code> objects
can be assigned to 0 (semantically equivalent to calling
<code><methodname
alt="boost::function::clear">clear</methodname>()</code>) and
compared against 0 (semantically equivalent to calling
<code><methodname
alt="boost::function::empty">empty</methodname>()</code>).</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>The Boost.Function code is now generated
entirely by the <libraryname>Preprocessor</libraryname> library,
so it is now possible to generate
<code><classname>boost::function</classname></code> and
<code><classname>boost::functionN</classname></code> class
templates for any number of arguments.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>The
<classname>boost::bad_function_call</classname> exception class
was introduced.</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</listitem>
<listitem><para><emphasis role="bold">Version 1.29.0</emphasis>:
Boost.Function has been partially redesigned to minimize the
interface and make it cleaner. Several seldom- or never-used
features of the older Boost.Function have been deprecated and will
be removed in the near future. Here is a list of features that have
been deprecated, the likely impact of the deprecations, and how to
adjust your code:
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><para>The <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> class template syntax has
changed. The old syntax, e.g., <computeroutput>boost::function&lt;int, float,
double, std::string&gt;</computeroutput>, has been changed to a more natural
syntax <computeroutput>boost::function&lt;int (float, double,
std::string)&gt;</computeroutput>, where all return and argument types are
encoded in a single function type parameter. Any other template
parameters (e.g., the <computeroutput>Allocator</computeroutput>) follow this single
parameter.</para>
<para> The resolution to this change depends on the
abilities of your compiler: if your compiler supports template
partial specialization and can parse function types (most do), modify
your code to use the newer
syntax (preferable) or directly use one of the
<computeroutput>functionN</computeroutput> classes whose syntax has not
changed. If your compiler does not support template partial
specialization or function types, you must take the latter option and
use the numbered Boost.Function classes. This option merely requires
changing types such as <computeroutput>boost::function&lt;void, int, int&gt;</computeroutput>
to <computeroutput>boost::function2&lt;void, int, int&gt;</computeroutput> (adding the number of
function arguments to the end of the class name).</para>
<para> Support for the old syntax with the
<computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> class template will persist for a short
while, but will eventually be removed so that we can provide better
error messages and link compatibility. </para></listitem>
<listitem><para>The invocation
policy template parameter (<computeroutput>Policy</computeroutput>) has been deprecated
and will be removed. There is no direct equivalent to this rarely
used feature.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>The mixin template parameter
(<computeroutput>Mixin</computeroutput>) has been deprecated and will be removed. There
is not direct equivalent to this rarely used feature.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>The
<computeroutput>set</computeroutput> methods have been deprecated and will be
removed. Use the assignment operator instead.</para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>

View File

@ -1,65 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<section id="function.misc" last-revision="$Date$">
<title>Miscellaneous Notes</title>
<section>
<title>Boost.Function vs. Function Pointers</title>
<para>Boost.Function has several advantages over function pointers, namely:
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><para>Boost.Function allows arbitrary compatible function objects to be targets (instead of requiring an exact function signature).</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Boost.Function may be used with argument-binding and other function object construction libraries.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Boost.Function has predictible behavior when an empty function object is called. </para></listitem>
</itemizedlist></para>
<para> And, of course, function pointers have several advantages over Boost.Function:
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><para> Function pointers are smaller (the size of one pointer instead of three) </para></listitem>
<listitem><para> Function pointers are faster (Boost.Function may require two calls through function pointers) </para></listitem>
<listitem><para> Function pointers are backward-compatible with C libraries.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para> More readable error messages. </para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Performance</title>
<section>
<title>Function object wrapper size</title>
<para> Function object wrappers will be the size of two function pointers plus one function pointer or data pointer (whichever is larger). On common 32-bit platforms, this amounts to 12 bytes per wrapper. Additionally, the function object target will be allocated on the heap.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Copying efficiency</title>
<para> Copying function object wrappers may require allocating memory for a copy of the function object target. The default allocator may be replaced with a faster custom allocator or one may choose to allow the function object wrappers to only store function object targets by reference (using <computeroutput>ref</computeroutput>) if the cost of this cloning becomes prohibitive.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Invocation efficiency</title>
<para> With a properly inlining compiler, an invocation of a function object requires one call through a function pointer. If the call is to a free function pointer, an additional call must be made to that function pointer (unless the compiler has very powerful interprocedural analysis).</para>
</section>
</section>
<section>
<title>Combatting virtual function "bloat"</title>
<para> The use of virtual functions tends to cause 'code bloat' on many compilers. When a class contains a virtual function, it is necessary to emit an additional function that classifies the type of the object. It has been our experience that these auxiliary functions increase the size of the executable significantly when many <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> objects are used. </para>
<para> In Boost.Function, an alternative but equivalent approach was taken using free functions instead of virtual functions. The Boost.Function object essentially holds two pointers to make a valid target call: a void pointer to the function object it contains and a void pointer to an "invoker" that can call the function object, given the function pointer. This invoker function performs the argument and return value conversions Boost.Function provides. A third pointer points to a free function called the "manager", which handles the cloning and destruction of function objects. The scheme is typesafe because the only functions that actually handle the function object, the invoker and the manager, are instantiated given the type of the function object, so they can safely cast the incoming void pointer (the function object pointer) to the appropriate type.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Acknowledgements</title>
<para> Many people were involved in the construction of this
library. William Kempf, Jesse Jones and Karl Nelson were all
extremely helpful in isolating an interface and scope for the
library. John Maddock managed the formal review, and many
reviewers gave excellent comments on interface, implementation,
and documentation. Peter Dimov led us to the function
declarator-based syntax.</para>
</section>
</section>

View File

@ -1,929 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<library-reference id="function.reference" last-revision="$Date$">
<section id="function.definitions">
<title>Definitions</title>
<para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>A function object <computeroutput>f</computeroutput> is
<emphasis>compatible</emphasis> if for the given set of argument
types <computeroutput>Arg1</computeroutput>,
<computeroutput>Arg2</computeroutput>, ...,
<computeroutput>ArgN</computeroutput> and a
return type <computeroutput>ResultType</computeroutput>, the
appropriate following function is well-formed:
<programlisting>
<emphasis>// if ResultType is not <emphasis role="bold">void</emphasis></emphasis>
ResultType foo(Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2, ..., Arg<emphasis>N</emphasis> arg<emphasis>N</emphasis>)
{
<emphasis role="bold">return</emphasis> f(arg1, arg2, ..., arg<emphasis>N</emphasis>);
}
<emphasis>// if ResultType is <emphasis role="bold">void</emphasis></emphasis>
ResultType foo(Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2, ..., Arg<emphasis>N</emphasis> arg<emphasis>N</emphasis>)
{
f(arg1, arg2, ..., arg<emphasis>N</emphasis>);
}
</programlisting></para>
<para> A special provision is made for pointers to member
functions. Though they are not function objects, Boost.Function
will adapt them internally to function objects. This requires
that a pointer to member function of the form <code>R
(X::*mf)(Arg1, Arg2, ..., ArgN)
cv-quals</code> be adapted to a
function object with the following function call operator
overloads:
<programlisting>
<emphasis role="bold">template</emphasis>&lt;<emphasis role="bold">typename P</emphasis>&gt;
R <emphasis role="bold">operator</emphasis>()(<emphasis>cv-quals</emphasis> P&amp; x, Arg1 arg1, Arg2 arg2, ..., Arg<emphasis>N</emphasis> arg<emphasis>N</emphasis>) <emphasis role="bold">const</emphasis>
{
<emphasis role="bold">return</emphasis> (*x).*mf(arg1, arg2, ..., arg<emphasis>N</emphasis>);
}
</programlisting>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>A function object <code>f</code> of
type <code>F</code> is
<emphasis>stateless</emphasis> if it is a function pointer or if
<code><classname>boost::is_stateless</classname>&lt;T&gt;</code>
is true. The construction of or copy to a Boost.Function object
from a stateless function object will not cause exceptions to be
thrown and will not allocate any storage.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<header name="boost/function.hpp">
<namespace name="boost">
<class name="bad_function_call">
<inherit access="public"><classname>std::runtime_error</classname></inherit>
<purpose>An exception type thrown when an instance of a <code>function</code> object is empty when invoked.</purpose>
<constructor>
<effects><simpara>Constructs a <code><classname>bad_function_call</classname></code> exception object.</simpara></effects>
</constructor>
</class>
<class name="function_base">
<purpose>The common base class for all Boost.Function
objects. Objects of type function_base may not be created
directly.</purpose>
<method-group name="capacity">
<method name="empty" cv="const">
<type>bool</type>
<returns><simpara><code>false</code> if <code>this</code> has a target, and <code>true</code> otherwise.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="target access">
<overloaded-method name="target">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>Functor*</type>
</signature>
<signature cv="const">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>const Functor*</type>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>If <code>this</code> stores a target of type
<code>Functor</code>, returns the address of the
target. Otherwise, returns the NULL
pointer.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</overloaded-method>
<method name="contains" cv="const">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const Functor&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<returns><simpara><code>true</code> if <code>this-&gt;<methodname>target</methodname>&lt;Functor&gt;()</code> is non-NULL and <code><functionname>function_equal</functionname>(*(this-&gt;target&lt;Functor&gt;()), f)</code></simpara></returns>
</method>
</method-group>
</class>
<class name="functionN">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="R"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator">
<default><classname>std::allocator</classname>&lt;void&gt;</default>
</template-type-parameter>
</template>
<inherit access="public"><classname>function_base</classname></inherit>
<purpose>A set of generalized function pointers that can be used for callbacks or wrapping function objects.</purpose>
<description>
<para>Class template <classname>functionN</classname> is
actually a family of related classes <classname
alt="functionN">function0</classname>, <classname
alt="functionN">function1</classname>, etc., up to some
implementation-defined maximum. In this context, <code>N</code>
refers to the number of parameters.</para>
</description>
<typedef name="result_type"><type>R</type></typedef>
<typedef name="allocator_type"><type>Allocator</type></typedef>
<typedef name="argument_type">
<type>T1</type><purpose>If N == 1</purpose>
</typedef>
<typedef name="first_argument_type">
<type>T1</type>
<purpose>If N == 2</purpose>
</typedef>
<typedef name="second_argument_type">
<type>T2</type>
<purpose>If N == 2</purpose>
</typedef>
<typedef name="arg1_type"><type>T1</type></typedef>
<typedef name="arg2_type"><type>T2</type></typedef>
<typedef name="..."><type/></typedef>
<typedef name="argN_type"><type>TN</type></typedef>
<static-constant name="arity">
<type>int</type>
<default>N</default>
</static-constant>
<struct name="sig">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Args"/>
</template>
<purpose>
<simpara><libraryname>Lambda</libraryname> library support</simpara>
</purpose>
<typedef name="type"><type>result_type</type></typedef>
</struct>
<constructor>
<postconditions><simpara><code>this-><methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<constructor>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<postconditions><simpara>Contains a copy of the <code>f</code>'s target, if it has one, or is empty if <code>f.<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw unless copying the target of <code>f</code> throws.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<constructor>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="F"/>
</template>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>F</paramtype></parameter>
<requires><simpara>F is a function object Callable from <code>this</code>.</simpara></requires>
<postconditions><simpara><code>*this</code> targets a copy of <code>f</code> if <code>f</code> is nonempty, or <code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code> if <code>f</code> is empty.</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw when <code>f</code> is a stateless function object.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<destructor>
<effects><simpara>If <code>!this-><methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>, destroys the target of this.</simpara></effects>
</destructor>
<copy-assignment>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<postconditions><simpara><code>*this</code> targets a copy of <code>f</code>'s target, if it has one, or is empty if <code>f.<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw when the target of <code>f</code> is a stateless function object or a reference to the function object.</simpara></throws>
</copy-assignment>
<method-group name="modifiers">
<method name="swap">
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<effects><simpara>Interchanges the targets of <code>*this</code> and <code>f</code>.</simpara></effects>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
<method name="clear">
<type>void</type>
<postconditions><simpara>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="capacity">
<method name="empty" cv="const">
<type>bool</type>
<returns><simpara><code>false</code> if <code>this</code> has a target, and <code>true</code> otherwise.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
<method name="conversion-operator" cv="const">
<type>safe_bool</type>
<returns><simpara>A <code>safe_bool</code> that evaluates <code>false</code> in a boolean context when <code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>, and <code>true</code> otherwise.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
<method name="operator!" cv="const">
<type>bool</type>
<returns><simpara><code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="target access">
<overloaded-method name="target">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>Functor*</type>
</signature>
<signature cv="const">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>const Functor*</type>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>If <code>this</code> stores a target of type
<code>Functor</code>, returns the address of the
target. Otherwise, returns the NULL
pointer.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</overloaded-method>
<method name="contains" cv="const">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const Functor&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<returns><simpara><code>true</code> if <code>this-&gt;<methodname>target</methodname>&lt;Functor&gt;()</code> is non-NULL and <code><functionname>function_equal</functionname>(*(this-&gt;target&lt;Functor&gt;()), f)</code></simpara></returns>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="invocation">
<method name="operator()" cv="const">
<type>result_type</type>
<parameter name="a1"><paramtype>arg1_type</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="a2"><paramtype>arg2_type</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter><paramtype>...</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="aN"><paramtype>argN_type</paramtype></parameter>
<effects><simpara><code>f(a1, a2, ..., aN)</code>, where <code>f</code> is the target of <code>*this</code>.</simpara></effects>
<returns><simpara>if <code>R</code> is <code>void</code>, nothing is returned; otherwise, the return value of the call to <code>f</code> is returned.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara><code><classname>bad_function_call</classname></code> if <code>!this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>. Otherwise, may through any exception thrown by the target function <code>f</code>.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<free-function-group name="specialized algorithms">
<function name="swap">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
</template>
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f1"><paramtype><classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f2"><paramtype><classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<effects><simpara><code>f1.<methodname>swap</methodname>(f2)</code></simpara></effects>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</function>
</free-function-group>
<free-function-group name="comparison operators">
<overloaded-function name="operator==">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="U1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="U2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="UN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator2"/>
</template>
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f1"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator1&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f2"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;U1, U2, ..., UN, Allocator2&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>True when <code>f</code> stores an object of
type <code>Functor</code> and one of the following conditions applies:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code>f.target&lt;Functor&gt;() == g.<methodname
alt="reference_wrapper::get_pointer">get_pointer</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is not of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and
<code><functionname>function_equal</functionname>(*(f.target&lt;Functor&gt;()),
g)</code>.</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</simpara></returns>
<notes><simpara><code><classname>functionN</classname></code>
objects are not
<conceptname>EqualityComparable</conceptname>.</simpara></notes>
<rationale><simpara>The <code>safe_bool</code> conversion
opens a loophole whereby two <code>functionN</code>
instances can be compared via <code>==</code>, although this
is not feasible to implement. The undefined <code>void
operator==</code> closes the loophole and ensures a
compile-time or link-time error.</simpara></rationale>
</overloaded-function>
<overloaded-function name="operator!=">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="T1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="T2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="TN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="U1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="U2"/>
<template-varargs/>
<template-type-parameter name="UN"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator2"/>
</template>
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f1"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator1&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f2"><paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&lt;U1, U2, ..., UN, Allocator2&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>True when <code>f</code> does not store an
object of type <code>Functor</code> or it stores an object of
type <code>Functor</code> and one of the following conditions
applies:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code>f.target&lt;Functor&gt;() != g.<methodname
alt="reference_wrapper::get_pointer">get_pointer</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is not of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code>!<functionname>function_equal</functionname>(*(f.target&lt;Functor&gt;()), g)</code>.</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</simpara></returns>
<notes><simpara><code><classname>functionN</classname></code>
objects are not
<conceptname>EqualityComparable</conceptname>.</simpara></notes>
<rationale><simpara>The <code>safe_bool</code> conversion
opens a loophole whereby two <code>functionN</code>
instances can be compared via <code>!=</code>, although this
is not feasible to implement. The undefined <code>void
operator!=</code> closes the loophole and ensures a
compile-time or link-time error.</simpara></rationale>
</overloaded-function>
</free-function-group>
</class>
<class name="function">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature">
<purpose>Function type R (T1, T2, ..., TN)</purpose>
</template-type-parameter>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator">
<default><classname>std::allocator</classname>&lt;void&gt;</default>
</template-type-parameter>
</template>
<inherit access="public"><classname>functionN</classname>&lt;R, T1, T2, ..., TN, Allocator&gt;</inherit>
<purpose>A generalized function pointer that can be used for
callbacks or wrapping function objects.</purpose>
<description>
<para>Class template <classname>function</classname> is a thin
wrapper around the numbered class templates <classname
alt="functionN">function0</classname>, <classname
alt="functionN">function1</classname>, etc. It accepts a
function type with N arguments and will will derive from
<classname>functionN</classname> instantiated with the arguments
it receives.</para>
<para>The semantics of all operations in class template
<classname>function</classname> are equivalent to that of the
underlying <classname>functionN</classname> object, although
additional member functions are required to allow proper copy
construction and copy assignment of function objects.</para>
</description>
<typedef name="result_type"><type>R</type></typedef>
<typedef name="allocator_type"><type>Allocator</type></typedef>
<typedef name="argument_type">
<type>T1</type><purpose>If N == 1</purpose>
</typedef>
<typedef name="first_argument_type">
<type>T1</type>
<purpose>If N == 2</purpose>
</typedef>
<typedef name="second_argument_type">
<type>T2</type>
<purpose>If N == 2</purpose>
</typedef>
<typedef name="arg1_type"><type>T1</type></typedef>
<typedef name="arg2_type"><type>T2</type></typedef>
<typedef name="..."><type/></typedef>
<typedef name="argN_type"><type>TN</type></typedef>
<static-constant name="arity">
<type>int</type>
<default>N</default>
</static-constant>
<struct name="sig">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Args"/>
</template>
<purpose>
<simpara><libraryname>Lambda</libraryname> library support</simpara>
</purpose>
<typedef name="type"><type>result_type</type></typedef>
</struct>
<constructor>
<postconditions><simpara><code>this-><methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<constructor>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<postconditions><simpara>Contains a copy of the <code>f</code>'s target, if it has one, or is empty if <code>f.<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw unless copying the target of <code>f</code> throws.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<constructor>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<postconditions><simpara>Contains a copy of the <code>f</code>'s target, if it has one, or is empty if <code>f.<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw unless copying the target of <code>f</code> throws.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<constructor>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="F"/>
</template>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>F</paramtype></parameter>
<requires><simpara>F is a function object Callable from <code>this</code>.</simpara></requires>
<postconditions><simpara><code>*this</code> targets a copy of <code>f</code> if <code>f</code> is nonempty, or <code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code> if <code>f</code> is empty.</simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw when <code>f</code> is a stateless function object.</simpara></throws>
</constructor>
<destructor>
<effects><simpara>If <code>!this-><methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>, destroys the target of <code>this</code>.</simpara></effects>
</destructor>
<copy-assignment>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const <classname>functionN</classname>&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<postconditions><simpara><code>*this</code> targets a copy of <code>f</code>'s target, if it has one, or is empty if <code>f.<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw when the target of <code>f</code> is a stateless function object or a reference to the function object.</simpara></throws>
</copy-assignment>
<copy-assignment>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<postconditions><simpara><code>*this</code> targets a copy of <code>f</code>'s target, if it has one, or is empty if <code>f.<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw when the target of <code>f</code> is a stateless function object or a reference to the function object.</simpara></throws>
</copy-assignment>
<method-group name="modifiers">
<method name="swap">
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<effects><simpara>Interchanges the targets of <code>*this</code> and <code>f</code>.</simpara></effects>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
<method name="clear">
<type>void</type>
<postconditions><simpara><code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></postconditions>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="capacity">
<method name="empty" cv="const">
<type>bool</type>
<returns><simpara><code>false</code> if <code>this</code> has a target, and <code>true</code> otherwise.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
<method name="conversion-operator" cv="const">
<type>safe_bool</type>
<returns><simpara>A <code>safe_bool</code> that evaluates <code>false</code> in a boolean context when <code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>, and <code>true</code> otherwise.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
<method name="operator!" cv="const">
<type>bool</type>
<returns><simpara><code>this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code></simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="target access">
<overloaded-method name="target">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>Functor*</type>
</signature>
<signature cv="const">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>const Functor*</type>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>If <code>this</code> stores a target of type
<code>Functor</code>, returns the address of the
target. Otherwise, returns the NULL
pointer.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</overloaded-method>
<method name="contains" cv="const">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const Functor&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<returns><simpara><code>true</code> if <code>this-&gt;<methodname>target</methodname>&lt;Functor&gt;()</code> is non-NULL and <code><functionname>function_equal</functionname>(*(this-&gt;target&lt;Functor&gt;()), f)</code></simpara></returns>
</method>
</method-group>
<method-group name="invocation">
<method name="operator()" cv="const">
<type>result_type</type>
<parameter name="a1"><paramtype>arg1_type</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="a2"><paramtype>arg2_type</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter><paramtype>...</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="aN"><paramtype>argN_type</paramtype></parameter>
<effects><simpara><code>f(a1, a2, ..., aN)</code>, where <code>f</code> is the target of <code>*this</code>.</simpara></effects>
<returns><simpara>if <code>R</code> is <code>void</code>, nothing is returned; otherwise, the return value of the call to <code>f</code> is returned.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara><code><classname>bad_function_call</classname></code> if <code>!this-&gt;<methodname>empty</methodname>()</code>. Otherwise, may through any exception thrown by the target function <code>f</code>.</simpara></throws>
</method>
</method-group>
<free-function-group name="specialized algorithms">
<function name="swap">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
</template>
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f1"><paramtype><classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f2"><paramtype><classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<effects><simpara><code>f1.<methodname>swap</methodname>(f2)</code></simpara></effects>
<throws><simpara>Will not throw.</simpara></throws>
</function>
</free-function-group>
<free-function-group name="comparison operators">
<overloaded-function name="operator==">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature2"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator2"/>
</template>
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f1"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature1, Allocator1&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f2"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature2, Allocator2&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>True when <code>f</code> stores an object of
type <code>Functor</code> and one of the following conditions applies:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code>f.target&lt;Functor&gt;() == g.<methodname
alt="reference_wrapper::get_pointer">get_pointer</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is not of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code><functionname>function_equals</functionname>(*(f.target&lt;Functor&gt;()), g)</code>.</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</simpara></returns>
<notes><simpara><code><classname>function</classname></code>
objects are not
<conceptname>EqualityComparable</conceptname>.</simpara></notes>
<rationale><simpara>The <code>safe_bool</code> conversion
opens a loophole whereby two <code>function</code>
instances can be compared via <code>==</code>, although this
is not feasible to implement. The undefined <code>void
operator==</code> closes the loophole and ensures a
compile-time or link-time error.</simpara></rationale>
</overloaded-function>
<overloaded-function name="operator!=">
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype>Functor</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Functor"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="g"><paramtype><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature, Allocator&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<signature>
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator1"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Signature2"/>
<template-type-parameter name="Allocator2"/>
</template>
<type>void</type>
<parameter name="f1"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature1, Allocator1&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
<parameter name="f2"><paramtype>const <classname>function</classname>&lt;Signature2, Allocator2&gt;&amp;</paramtype></parameter>
</signature>
<returns><simpara>True when <code>f</code> does not store an
object of type <code>Functor</code> or it stores an object of
type <code>Functor</code> and one of the following conditions
applies:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code>f.target&lt;Functor&gt;() != g.<methodname
alt="reference_wrapper::get_pointer">get_pointer</methodname>()</code>.</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara><code>g</code> is not of type
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname>&lt;Functor&gt;</code>
and <code>!<functionname>function_equals</functionname>(*(f.target&lt;Functor&gt;()), g)</code>.</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</simpara></returns>
<notes><simpara><code><classname>function</classname></code>
objects are not
<conceptname>EqualityComparable</conceptname>.</simpara></notes>
<rationale><simpara>The <code>safe_bool</code> conversion
opens a loophole whereby two <code>function</code>
instances can be compared via <code>!=</code>, although this
is not feasible to implement. The undefined <code>void
operator!=</code> closes the loophole and ensures a
compile-time or link-time error.</simpara></rationale>
</overloaded-function>
</free-function-group>
</class>
</namespace>
</header>
<header name="boost/function_equal.hpp">
<namespace name="boost">
<function name="function_equal">
<template>
<template-type-parameter name="F"/>
<template-type-parameter name="G"/>
</template>
<type>bool</type>
<parameter name="f">
<paramtype>const F&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<parameter name="g">
<paramtype>const G&amp;</paramtype>
</parameter>
<purpose><simpara>Compare two function objects for equality.</simpara></purpose>
<returns><simpara><code>f == g</code>.</simpara></returns>
<throws><simpara>Only if <code>f == g</code> throws.</simpara></throws>
</function>
</namespace>
</header>
</library-reference>

View File

@ -1,251 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<testsuite id="function.testsuite" last-revision="$Date$">
<run-test filename="function_test.cpp" name="lib_function_test">
<purpose><para>Test the capabilities of the <classname>boost::function</classname> class template.</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>The <classname>boost::function</classname> class template may not be usable on your compiler. However, the library may still be usable via the <classname>boost::functionN</classname> class templates.</para></if-fails>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="function_n_test.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the capabilities of the <classname>boost::functionN</classname> class templates.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="allocator_test.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the use of custom allocators.</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>Allocators are ignored by the implementation.</para></if-fails>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="stateless_test.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the optimization of stateless function objects in the Boost.Function library.</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>The exception-safety and performance guarantees given for stateless function objects may not be met by the implementation.</para></if-fails>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="lambda_test.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the interaction between Boost.Function and Boost.Lambda.</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>Either Boost.Lambda does not work on the platform, or Boost.Function cannot safely be applied without the use of <functionname>boost::unlambda</functionname>.</para></if-fails>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="contains_test.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the operation of the
<code><methodname>target</methodname></code> member function and the
equality operators.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<compile-fail-test filename="function_test_fail1.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the (incorrect!) use of comparisons between Boost.Function function objects.</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>Intuitive (but incorrect!) code may compile and will give meaningless results.</para></if-fails>
</compile-fail-test>
<compile-fail-test filename="function_test_fail2.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the use of an incompatible function object with Boost.Function</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>Incorrect code may compile (with potentially unexpected results).</para></if-fails>
</compile-fail-test>
<compile-test filename="function_30.cpp">
<purpose><para>Test the generation of a Boost.Function function object adaptor accepting 30 arguments.</para></purpose>
<if-fails><para>The Boost.Function library may work for function object adaptors of up to 10 parameters, but will be unable to generate adaptors for an arbitrary number of parameters. Failure often indicates an error in the compiler's preprocessor.</para></if-fails>
</compile-test>
<run-test filename="function_arith_cxx98.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.mul_ints"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.int_div"/>
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.arith.cxx98"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.use_int_div"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.call_int_div"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.check_empty"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.clear"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.use_mul_ints"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test the first tutorial example.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="function_arith_portable.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.mul_ints"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.int_div"/>
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.arith.portable"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.use_int_div"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.call_int_div"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.check_empty"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.clear"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.use_mul_ints"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test the first tutorial example.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="sum_avg_cxx98.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.sum_avg"/>
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.sum_avg_decl.cxx98"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.use_sum_avg"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test the second tutorial example.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="sum_avg_portable.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.sum_avg"/>
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.sum_avg_decl.portable"/>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.use_sum_avg"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test the second tutorial example.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="mem_fun_cxx98.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.X"/>
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.mem_fun.cxx98"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test member function example from tutorial.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="mem_fun_portable.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.X"/>
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.mem_fun.portable"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test member function example from tutorial.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="std_bind_cxx98.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.X"/>
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.std_bind.cxx98"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test standard binders example from tutorial.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="std_bind_portable.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
]]>
<snippet name="function.tutorial.X"/>
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.std_bind.portable"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test standard binders example from tutorial.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="function_ref_cxx98.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
]]>
struct stateful_type { int operator()(int) const { return 0; } };
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.ref.cxx98"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test <functionname>boost::ref</functionname> example from tutorial.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
<run-test filename="function_ref_portable.cpp">
<source>
<![CDATA[
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
]]>
struct stateful_type { int operator()(int) const { return 0; } };
int main()
{
<snippet name="function.tutorial.ref.portable"/>
return 0;
}
</source>
<purpose><para>Test <functionname>boost::ref</functionname> example from tutorial.</para></purpose>
</run-test>
</testsuite>

View File

@ -1,357 +0,0 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE library PUBLIC "-//Boost//DTD BoostBook XML V1.0//EN"
"http://www.boost.org/tools/boostbook/dtd/boostbook.dtd">
<section xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" id="function.tutorial"
last-revision="$Date$">
<title>Tutorial</title>
<using-namespace name="boost"/>
<para> Boost.Function has two syntactical forms: the preferred form
and the portable form. The preferred form fits more closely with the
C++ language and reduces the number of separate template parameters
that need to be considered, often improving readability; however, the
preferred form is not supported on all platforms due to compiler
bugs. The compatible form will work on all compilers supported by
Boost.Function. Consult the table below to determine which syntactic
form to use for your compiler.
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="2" align="left">
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Preferred syntax</entry>
<entry>Portable syntax</entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><simpara>GNU C++ 2.95.x, 3.0.x, 3.1.x</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Comeau C++ 4.2.45.2</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>SGI MIPSpro 7.3.0</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Intel C++ 5.0, 6.0</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Compaq's cxx 6.2</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Microsoft Visual C++ 7.1</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</entry>
<entry>
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem><simpara><emphasis>Any compiler supporting the preferred syntax</emphasis></simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0, 7.0</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Borland C++ 5.5.1</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Sun WorkShop 6 update 2 C++ 5.3</simpara></listitem>
<listitem><simpara>Metrowerks CodeWarrior 8.1</simpara></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
</para>
<para> If your compiler does not appear in this list, please try the preferred syntax and report your results to the Boost list so that we can keep this table up-to-date.</para>
<using-class name="boost::function"/>
<section>
<title>Basic Usage</title> <para> A function wrapper is defined simply
by instantiating the <computeroutput>function</computeroutput> class
template with the desired return type and argument types, formulated
as a C++ function type. Any number of arguments may be supplied, up to
some implementation-defined limit (10 is the default maximum). The
following declares a function object wrapper
<computeroutput>f</computeroutput> that takes two
<computeroutput>int</computeroutput> parameters and returns a
<computeroutput>float</computeroutput>:
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="2" align="left">
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Preferred syntax</entry>
<entry>Portable syntax</entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.arith.cxx98"><classname>boost::function</classname>&lt;float (int x, int y)&gt; f;</programlisting>
</entry>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.arith.portable"><classname alt="functionN">boost::function2</classname>&lt;float, int, int&gt; f;</programlisting>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
</para>
<para> By default, function object wrappers are empty, so we can create a
function object to assign to <computeroutput>f</computeroutput>:
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.int_div">struct int_div {
float operator()(int x, int y) const { return ((float)x)/y; };
};</programlisting>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.use_int_div">f = int_div();</programlisting>
</para>
<para> Now we can use <computeroutput>f</computeroutput> to execute
the underlying function object
<computeroutput>int_div</computeroutput>:
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.call_int_div">std::cout &lt;&lt; f(5, 3) &lt;&lt; std::endl;</programlisting>
</para>
<para> We are free to assign any compatible function object to
<computeroutput>f</computeroutput>. If
<computeroutput>int_div</computeroutput> had been declared to take two
<computeroutput>long</computeroutput> operands, the implicit
conversions would have been applied to the arguments without any user
interference. The only limit on the types of arguments is that they be
CopyConstructible, so we can even use references and arrays:
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="1" align="left">
<thead><row><entry>Preferred syntax</entry></row></thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.sum_avg_decl.cxx98"><classname>boost::function</classname>&lt;void (int values[], int n, int&amp; sum, float&amp; avg)&gt; sum_avg;</programlisting>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="1" align="left">
<thead><row><entry>Portable syntax</entry></row></thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.sum_avg_decl.portable"><classname alt="functionN">boost::function4</classname>&lt;void, int*, int, int&amp;, float&amp;&gt; sum_avg;</programlisting>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.sum_avg">void do_sum_avg(int values[], int n, int&amp; sum, float&amp; avg)
{
sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i &lt; n; i++)
sum += values[i];
avg = (float)sum / n;
}</programlisting>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.use_sum_avg">sum_avg = &amp;do_sum_avg;</programlisting>
</para>
<para> Invoking a function object wrapper that does not actually
contain a function object is a precondition violation, much like
trying to call through a null function pointer, and will throw a <classname>bad_function_call</classname> exception). We can check for an
empty function object wrapper by using it in a boolean context (it evaluates <computeroutput>true</computeroutput> if the wrapper is not empty) or compare it against <computeroutput>0</computeroutput>. For instance:
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.check_empty">if (f)
std::cout &lt;&lt; f(5, 3) &lt;&lt; std::endl;
else
std::cout &lt;&lt; "f has no target, so it is unsafe to call" &lt;&lt; std::endl;</programlisting>
</para>
<para> Alternatively,
<computeroutput><methodname>empty</methodname>()</computeroutput>
method will return whether or not the wrapper is empty. </para>
<para> Finally, we can clear out a function target by assigning it to <computeroutput>0</computeroutput> or by calling the <computeroutput><methodname>clear</methodname>()</computeroutput> member function, e.g.,
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.clear">f = 0;</programlisting>
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Free functions</title>
<para> Free function pointers can be considered singleton function objects with const function call operators, and can therefore be directly used with the function object wrappers:
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.mul_ints">float mul_ints(int x, int y) { return ((float)x) * y; }</programlisting>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.use_mul_ints">f = &amp;mul_ints;</programlisting>
</para>
<para> Note that the <computeroutput>&amp;</computeroutput> isn't really necessary unless you happen to be using Microsoft Visual C++ version 6. </para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Member functions</title>
<para> In many systems, callbacks often call to member functions of a
particular object. This is often referred to as "argument binding",
and is beyond the scope of Boost.Function. The use of member functions
directly, however, is supported, so the following code is valid:
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.X">struct X {
int foo(int);
};</programlisting>
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="2" align="left">
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Preferred syntax</entry>
<entry>Portable syntax</entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.mem_fun.cxx98"><classname>boost::function</classname>&lt;int (X*, int)&gt; f;
f = &amp;X::foo;
X x;
f(&amp;x, 5);</programlisting>
</entry>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.mem_fun.portable"><classname alt="functionN">boost::function2</classname>&lt;int, X*, int&gt; f;
f = &amp;X::foo;
X x;
f(&amp;x, 5);</programlisting>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
</para>
<para> Several libraries exist that support argument binding. Three such libraries are summarized below:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem> <para><libraryname>Bind</libraryname>. This library allows binding of
arguments for any function object. It is lightweight and very
portable.</para></listitem>
<listitem> <para>The C++ Standard library. Using
<computeroutput>std::bind1st</computeroutput> and
<computeroutput>std::mem_fun</computeroutput> together one can bind
the object of a pointer-to-member function for use with
Boost.Function:
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="2" align="left">
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Preferred syntax</entry>
<entry>Portable syntax</entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.std_bind.cxx98"> <classname>boost::function</classname>&lt;int (int)&gt; f;
X x;
f = std::bind1st(
std::mem_fun(&amp;X::foo), &amp;x);
f(5); // Call x.foo(5)</programlisting>
</entry>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.std_bind.portable"> <classname alt="functionN">boost::function1</classname>&lt;int, int&gt; f;
X x;
f = std::bind1st(
std::mem_fun(&amp;X::foo), &amp;x);
f(5); // Call x.foo(5)</programlisting>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem><para>The <libraryname>Lambda</libraryname> library. This library provides a powerful composition mechanism to construct function objects that uses very natural C++ syntax. Lambda requires a compiler that is reasonably conformant to the C++ standard. </para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>References to Function Objects</title> <para> In some cases it is
expensive (or semantically incorrect) to have Boost.Function clone a
function object. In such cases, it is possible to request that
Boost.Function keep only a reference to the actual function
object. This is done using the <computeroutput>ref</computeroutput>
and <computeroutput>cref</computeroutput> functions to wrap a
reference to a function object:
<informaltable>
<tgroup cols="2" align="left">
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Preferred syntax</entry>
<entry>Portable syntax</entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.ref.cxx98">stateful_type a_function_object;
<classname>boost::function</classname>&lt;int (int)&gt; f;
f = <functionname>boost::ref</functionname>(a_function_object);
<classname>boost::function</classname>&lt;int (int)&gt; f2(f);</programlisting>
</entry>
<entry>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.ref.portable">stateful_type a_function_object;
<classname alt="functionN">boost::function1</classname>&lt;int, int&gt; f;
f = <functionname>boost::ref</functionname>(a_function_object);
<classname alt="functionN">boost::function1</classname>&lt;int, int&gt; f2(f);</programlisting>
</entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</informaltable>
</para>
<para> Here, <computeroutput>f</computeroutput> will not make a copy
of <computeroutput>a_function_object</computeroutput>, nor will
<computeroutput>f2</computeroutput> when it is targeted to
<computeroutput>f</computeroutput>'s reference to
<computeroutput>a_function_object</computeroutput>. Additionally, when
using references to function objects, Boost.Function will not throw
exceptions during assignment or construction.
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Comparing Boost.Function function objects</title>
<para>Function object wrappers can be compared via <code>==</code>
or <code>!=</code> against any function object that can be stored
within the wrapper. If the function object wrapper contains a
function object of that type, it will be compared against the given
function object (which must be
<conceptname>EqualityComparable</conceptname>). For instance:</para>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.compare">int compute_with_X(X*, int);
f = &amp;X::foo;
assert(f == &amp;X::foo);
assert(&amp;compute_with_X != f);</programlisting>
<para>When comparing against an instance of
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname></code>, the address
of the object in the
<code><classname>reference_wrapper</classname></code> is compared
against the address of the object stored by the function object
wrapper:</para>
<programlisting name="function.tutorial.compare-ref">a_stateful_object so1, so2;
f = <functionname>boost::ref</functionname>(so1);
assert(f == <functionname>boost::ref</functionname>(so1));
assert(f == so1); <emphasis>// Only if a_stateful_object is <conceptname>EqualityComparable</conceptname></emphasis>
assert(f != <functionname>boost::ref</functionname>(so2));</programlisting>
</section>
</section>

View File

@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library examples
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <functional>
struct X {
X(int val) : value(val) {}
int foo(int x) { return x * value; }
int value;
};
int
main()
{
boost::function<int (int)> f;
X x(7);
f = std::bind1st(std::mem_fun(&X::foo), &x);
std::cout << f(5) << std::endl; // Call x.foo(5)
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library examples
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
struct int_div {
float operator()(int x, int y) const { return ((float)x)/y; };
};
int
main()
{
boost::function<float (int, int)> f;
f = int_div();
std::cout << f(5, 3) << std::endl; // 1.66667
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library examples
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
void do_sum_avg(int values[], int n, int& sum, float& avg)
{
sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
sum += values[i];
avg = (float)sum / n;
}
int
main()
{
// The second parameter should be int[], but some compilers (e.g., GCC)
// complain about this
boost::function<void (int*, int, int&, float&)> sum_avg;
sum_avg = &do_sum_avg;
int values[5] = { 1, 1, 2, 3, 5 };
int sum;
float avg;
sum_avg(values, 5, sum, avg);
std::cout << "sum = " << sum << std::endl;
std::cout << "avg = " << avg << std::endl;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0; URL=../../doc/html/function.html">
</head>
<body>
Automatic redirection failed, please go to
<a href="../../doc/html/function.html">../../doc/html/function.html</a>
</body>
</html>

View File

@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
# Function library
# Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
# Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software License,
# Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
# http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
# For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
# Testing Jamfile autogenerated from XML source
subproject libs/function/test ;
# bring in rules for testing
SEARCH on testing.jam = $(BOOST_BUILD_PATH) ;
include testing.jam ;
# Make tests run by default.
DEPENDS all : test ;
{
# look in BOOST_ROOT for sources first, just in this Jamfile
local SEARCH_SOURCE = $(BOOST_ROOT) $(SEARCH_SOURCE) ;
test-suite function
:
[ run libs/function/test/function_test.cpp : : : : lib_function_test ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_n_test.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/allocator_test.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/stateless_test.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/lambda_test.cpp : : : : ]
[ compile-fail libs/function/test/function_test_fail1.cpp : : : : ]
[ compile-fail libs/function/test/function_test_fail2.cpp : : : : ]
[ compile libs/function/test/function_30.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_arith_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_arith_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/sum_avg_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/sum_avg_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/mem_fun_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/mem_fun_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/std_bind_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/std_bind_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_ref_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_ref_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/contains_test.cpp : : : : ]
;
}

View File

@ -1,61 +0,0 @@
# Function library
# Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
# distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
# 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
# http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
# For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
project
: source-location $(BOOST_ROOT)
;
# bring in rules for testing
import testing ;
{
test-suite function
:
[ run libs/function/test/function_test.cpp : : : : lib_function_test ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_n_test.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/allocator_test.cpp ../../../libs/test/build//boost_test_exec_monitor : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/stateless_test.cpp ../../../libs/test/build//boost_test_exec_monitor : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/lambda_test.cpp ../../../libs/test/build//boost_test_exec_monitor : : : : ]
[ compile-fail libs/function/test/function_test_fail1.cpp : : : : ]
[ compile-fail libs/function/test/function_test_fail2.cpp : : : : ]
[ compile libs/function/test/function_30.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_arith_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_arith_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/sum_avg_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/sum_avg_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/mem_fun_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/mem_fun_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/std_bind_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/std_bind_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_ref_cxx98.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/function_ref_portable.cpp : : : : ]
[ run libs/function/test/contains_test.cpp : : : : ]
;
}

View File

@ -1,81 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <cassert>
#include <functional>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost;
static int alloc_count = 0;
static int dealloc_count = 0;
template<typename T>
struct counting_allocator : public std::allocator<T>
{
template<typename U>
struct rebind
{
typedef counting_allocator<U> other;
};
T* allocate(std::size_t n)
{
alloc_count++;
return std::allocator<T>::allocate(n);
}
void deallocate(T* p, std::size_t n)
{
dealloc_count++;
std::allocator<T>::deallocate(p, n);
}
};
static int do_minus(int x, int y) { return x-y; }
struct DoNothing
{
void operator()() const {}
};
static void do_nothing() {}
int
test_main(int, char*[])
{
function2<int, int, int, counting_allocator<int> > f;
f = plus<int>();
f.clear();
BOOST_TEST(alloc_count == 1);
BOOST_TEST(dealloc_count == 1);
alloc_count = 0;
dealloc_count = 0;
f = &do_minus;
f.clear();
function0<void, counting_allocator<int> > fv;
alloc_count = 0;
dealloc_count = 0;
fv = DoNothing();
fv.clear();
BOOST_TEST(alloc_count == 1);
BOOST_TEST(dealloc_count == 1);
alloc_count = 0;
dealloc_count = 0;
fv = &do_nothing;
fv.clear();
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,174 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2004. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <boost/ref.hpp>
static int forty_two() { return 42; }
struct Seventeen
{
int operator()() const { return 17; }
};
struct ReturnInt
{
explicit ReturnInt(int value) : value(value) {}
int operator()() const { return value; }
int value;
};
bool operator==(const ReturnInt& x, const ReturnInt& y)
{ return x.value == y.value; }
bool operator!=(const ReturnInt& x, const ReturnInt& y)
{ return x.value != y.value; }
static void target_test()
{
boost::function0<int> f;
f = &forty_two;
BOOST_TEST(*f.target<int (*)()>() == &forty_two);
BOOST_TEST(!f.target<Seventeen>());
f = Seventeen();
BOOST_TEST(!f.target<int (*)()>());
BOOST_TEST(f.target<Seventeen>());
Seventeen this_seventeen;
f = boost::ref(this_seventeen);
BOOST_TEST(!f.target<int (*)()>());
BOOST_TEST(f.target<Seventeen>());
BOOST_TEST(f.target<Seventeen>() == &this_seventeen);
}
static void equal_test()
{
boost::function0<int> f;
f = &forty_two;
BOOST_TEST(f == &forty_two);
BOOST_TEST(f != ReturnInt(17));
#if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(&forty_two == f);
BOOST_TEST(ReturnInt(17) != f);
#endif
BOOST_TEST(f.contains(&forty_two));
f = ReturnInt(17);
BOOST_TEST(f != &forty_two);
BOOST_TEST(f == ReturnInt(17));
BOOST_TEST(f != ReturnInt(16));
#if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(&forty_two != f);
BOOST_TEST(ReturnInt(17) == f);
BOOST_TEST(ReturnInt(16) != f);
#endif
BOOST_TEST(f.contains(ReturnInt(17)));
#if !defined(BOOST_FUNCTION_NO_FUNCTION_TYPE_SYNTAX)
boost::function<int(void)> g;
g = &forty_two;
BOOST_TEST(g == &forty_two);
BOOST_TEST(g != ReturnInt(17));
# if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(&forty_two == g);
BOOST_TEST(ReturnInt(17) != g);
# endif
g = ReturnInt(17);
BOOST_TEST(g != &forty_two);
BOOST_TEST(g == ReturnInt(17));
BOOST_TEST(g != ReturnInt(16));
# if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(&forty_two != g);
BOOST_TEST(ReturnInt(17) == g);
BOOST_TEST(ReturnInt(16) != g);
# endif
#endif
}
static void ref_equal_test()
{
{
ReturnInt ri(17);
boost::function0<int> f = boost::ref(ri);
// References and values are equal
BOOST_TEST(f == boost::ref(ri));
BOOST_TEST(f == ri);
BOOST_TEST(boost::ref(ri) == f);
BOOST_TEST(!(f != boost::ref(ri)));
BOOST_TEST(!(f != ri));
BOOST_TEST(!(boost::ref(ri) != f));
#if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(ri == f);
BOOST_TEST(!(ri != f));
#endif
// Values equal, references inequal
ReturnInt ri2(17);
BOOST_TEST(f == ri2);
BOOST_TEST(f != boost::ref(ri2));
BOOST_TEST(boost::ref(ri2) != f);
BOOST_TEST(!(f != ri2));
BOOST_TEST(!(f == boost::ref(ri2)));
BOOST_TEST(!(boost::ref(ri2) == f));
#if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(ri2 == f);
BOOST_TEST(!(ri2 != f));
#endif
}
#if !defined(BOOST_FUNCTION_NO_FUNCTION_TYPE_SYNTAX)
{
ReturnInt ri(17);
boost::function<int(void)> f = boost::ref(ri);
// References and values are equal
BOOST_TEST(f == boost::ref(ri));
BOOST_TEST(f == ri);
BOOST_TEST(boost::ref(ri) == f);
BOOST_TEST(!(f != boost::ref(ri)));
BOOST_TEST(!(f != ri));
BOOST_TEST(!(boost::ref(ri) != f));
# if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(ri == f);
BOOST_TEST(!(ri != f));
# endif
// Values equal, references inequal
ReturnInt ri2(17);
BOOST_TEST(f == ri2);
BOOST_TEST(f != boost::ref(ri2));
BOOST_TEST(boost::ref(ri2) != f);
BOOST_TEST(!(f != ri2));
BOOST_TEST(!(f == boost::ref(ri2)));
BOOST_TEST(!(boost::ref(ri2) == f));
# if !(defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ == 3 && __GNUC_MINOR__ <= 3)
BOOST_TEST(ri2 == f);
BOOST_TEST(!(ri2 != f));
# endif
}
#endif
}
int test_main(int, char*[])
{
target_test();
equal_test();
ref_equal_test();
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2002-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
// Make sure we don't try to redefine function2
#include <boost/function/function2.hpp>
// Define all Boost.Function class templates up to 30 arguments
#define BOOST_FUNCTION_MAX_ARGS 30
#include <boost/function.hpp>
int main()
{
boost::function0<float> f0;
boost::function30<float, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int,
int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int,
int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int, int> f30;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,34 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
float mul_ints(int x, int y) { return ((float)x) * y; }
struct int_div {
float operator()(int x, int y) const { return ((float)x)/y; };
};
int main()
{
boost::function<float (int x, int y)> f;
f = int_div();
std::cout << f(5, 3) << std::endl;
if (f)
std::cout << f(5, 3) << std::endl;
else
std::cout << "f has no target, so it is unsafe to call" << std::endl;
f = 0;
f = &mul_ints;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
float mul_ints(int x, int y) { return ((float)x) * y; }
struct int_div {
float operator()(int x, int y) const { return ((float)x)/y; };
};
int main()
{
boost::function2<float, int, int> f;
f = int_div();
std::cout << f(5, 3) << std::endl;
if (f)
std::cout << f(5, 3) << std::endl;
else
std::cout << "f has no target, so it is unsafe to call" << std::endl;
f = 0;
f = &mul_ints;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,648 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <functional>
#include <cassert>
#include <string>
using namespace boost;
using std::string;
using std::negate;
int global_int;
struct write_five_obj { void operator()() const { global_int = 5; } };
struct write_three_obj { int operator()() const { global_int = 3; return 7; }};
static void write_five() { global_int = 5; }
static void write_three() { global_int = 3; }
struct generate_five_obj { int operator()() const { return 5; } };
struct generate_three_obj { int operator()() const { return 3; } };
static int generate_five() { return 5; }
static int generate_three() { return 3; }
static string identity_str(const string& s) { return s; }
static string string_cat(const string& s1, const string& s2) { return s1+s2; }
static int sum_ints(int x, int y) { return x+y; }
struct write_const_1_nonconst_2
{
void operator()() { global_int = 2; }
void operator()() const { global_int = 1; }
};
struct add_to_obj
{
add_to_obj(int v) : value(v) {}
int operator()(int x) const { return value + x; }
int value;
};
static void
test_zero_args()
{
typedef function0<void> func_void_type;
write_five_obj five = write_five_obj(); // Initialization for Borland C++ 5.5
write_three_obj three = write_three_obj(); // Ditto
// Default construction
func_void_type v1;
BOOST_TEST(v1.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v1 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v1.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!v1);
// Assignment to an empty function
v1 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation and self-assignment
global_int = 0;
v1 = v1;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v1 = five;
// Invocation and self-assignment
global_int = 0;
v1 = (v1);
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear
v1 = 0;
BOOST_TEST(v1.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v1 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v1 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v1 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v1 = write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Construction from another function (that is empty)
v1.clear();
func_void_type v2(v1);
BOOST_TEST(!v2? true : false);
// Assignment to an empty function
v2 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v2 = (five);
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
v2.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v2.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v2 = (&write_five);
BOOST_TEST(v2? true : false);
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v2 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Swapping
v1 = five;
swap(v1, v2);
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
swap(v1, v2);
v1.clear();
// Assignment
v2 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v2 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a function from an empty function
v2 = v1;
BOOST_TEST(v2.empty());
// Assignment to a function from a function with a functor
v1 = three;
v2 = v1;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assign to a function from a function with a function
v2 = &write_five;
v1 = v2;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construct a function given another function containing a function
func_void_type v3(v1);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v3.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!v3? true : false);
// Assignment to an empty function
v3 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v3 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v3.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v3.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v3 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v3 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v3 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construction of a function from a function containing a functor
func_void_type v4(v3);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v4.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v4.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v4 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v4 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v4.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v4.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v4 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v4 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v4 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construction of a function from a functor
func_void_type v5(five);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v5.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v5.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v5 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v5 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v5.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v5.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v5 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v5 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v5 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construction of a function from a function
func_void_type v6(&write_five);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v6.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v6.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v6 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v6 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v6.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v6.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v6 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v6 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v6 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Const vs. non-const
// Initialization for Borland C++ 5.5
write_const_1_nonconst_2 one_or_two = write_const_1_nonconst_2();
const function0<void> v7(one_or_two);
function0<void> v8(one_or_two);
global_int = 0;
v7();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 2);
global_int = 0;
v8();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 2);
// Test construction from 0 and comparison to 0
func_void_type v9(0);
BOOST_TEST(v9 == 0);
# if !defined(__SUNPRO_CC) || __SUNPRO_CC > 0x540 || defined(BOOST_STRICT_CONFIG)
BOOST_TEST(0 == v9);
#else
BOOST_TEST(v9.empty());
#endif
// Test return values
typedef function0<int> func_int_type;
// Initialization for Borland C++ 5.5
generate_five_obj gen_five = generate_five_obj();
generate_three_obj gen_three = generate_three_obj();
func_int_type i0(gen_five);
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 5);
i0 = gen_three;
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 3);
i0 = &generate_five;
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 5);
i0 = &generate_three;
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 3);
BOOST_TEST(i0? true : false);
i0.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!i0? true : false);
// Test return values with compatible types
typedef function0<long> func_long_type;
func_long_type i1(gen_five);
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 5);
i1 = gen_three;
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 3);
i1 = &generate_five;
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 5);
i1 = &generate_three;
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 3);
BOOST_TEST(i1? true : false);
i1.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!i1? true : false);
}
static void
test_one_arg()
{
negate<int> neg = negate<int>(); // Initialization for Borland C++ 5.5
function1<int, int> f1(neg);
BOOST_TEST(f1(5) == -5);
function1<string, string> id(&identity_str);
BOOST_TEST(id("str") == "str");
function1<std::string, const char*> id2(&identity_str);
BOOST_TEST(id2("foo") == "foo");
add_to_obj add_to(5);
function1<int, int> f2(add_to);
BOOST_TEST(f2(3) == 8);
const function1<int, int> cf2(add_to);
BOOST_TEST(cf2(3) == 8);
}
static void
test_two_args()
{
function2<string, const string&, const string&> cat(&string_cat);
BOOST_TEST(cat("str", "ing") == "string");
function2<int, short, short> sum(&sum_ints);
BOOST_TEST(sum(2, 3) == 5);
}
static void
test_emptiness()
{
function0<float> f1;
BOOST_TEST(f1.empty());
function0<float> f2;
f2 = f1;
BOOST_TEST(f2.empty());
function0<double> f3;
f3 = f2;
BOOST_TEST(f3.empty());
}
struct X {
X(int v) : value(v) {}
int twice() const { return 2*value; }
int plus(int v) { return value + v; }
int value;
};
static void
test_member_functions()
{
boost::function1<int, X*> f1(&X::twice);
X one(1);
X five(5);
BOOST_TEST(f1(&one) == 2);
BOOST_TEST(f1(&five) == 10);
boost::function1<int, X*> f1_2;
f1_2 = &X::twice;
BOOST_TEST(f1_2(&one) == 2);
BOOST_TEST(f1_2(&five) == 10);
boost::function2<int, X&, int> f2(&X::plus);
BOOST_TEST(f2(one, 3) == 4);
BOOST_TEST(f2(five, 4) == 9);
}
struct add_with_throw_on_copy {
int operator()(int x, int y) const { return x+y; }
add_with_throw_on_copy() {}
add_with_throw_on_copy(const add_with_throw_on_copy&)
{
throw std::runtime_error("But this CAN'T throw");
}
add_with_throw_on_copy& operator=(const add_with_throw_on_copy&)
{
throw std::runtime_error("But this CAN'T throw");
}
};
static void
test_ref()
{
add_with_throw_on_copy atc;
try {
boost::function2<int, int, int> f(ref(atc));
BOOST_TEST(f(1, 3) == 4);
}
catch(std::runtime_error e) {
BOOST_ERROR("Nonthrowing constructor threw an exception");
}
}
int test_main(int, char* [])
{
test_zero_args();
test_one_arg();
test_two_args();
test_emptiness();
test_member_functions();
test_ref();
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
struct stateful_type { int operator()(int) const { return 0; } };
int main()
{
stateful_type a_function_object;
boost::function<int (int)> f;
f = boost::ref(a_function_object);
boost::function<int (int)> f2(f);
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
struct stateful_type { int operator()(int) const { return 0; } };
int main()
{
stateful_type a_function_object;
boost::function1<int, int> f;
f = boost::ref(a_function_object);
boost::function1<int, int> f2(f);
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,748 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <functional>
#include <cassert>
#include <string>
#include <utility>
using namespace boost;
using namespace std;
int global_int;
struct write_five_obj { void operator()() const { global_int = 5; } };
struct write_three_obj { int operator()() const { global_int = 3; return 7; }};
static void write_five() { global_int = 5; }
static void write_three() { global_int = 3; }
struct generate_five_obj { int operator()() const { return 5; } };
struct generate_three_obj { int operator()() const { return 3; } };
static int generate_five() { return 5; }
static int generate_three() { return 3; }
static string identity_str(const string& s) { return s; }
static string string_cat(const string& s1, const string& s2) { return s1+s2; }
static int sum_ints(int x, int y) { return x+y; }
struct write_const_1_nonconst_2
{
void operator()() { global_int = 2; }
void operator()() const { global_int = 1; }
};
struct add_to_obj
{
add_to_obj(int v) : value(v) {}
int operator()(int x) const { return value + x; }
int value;
};
static void
test_zero_args()
{
typedef function<void ()> func_void_type;
write_five_obj five;
write_three_obj three;
// Default construction
func_void_type v1;
BOOST_TEST(v1.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v1 = five;
BOOST_TEST(v1 != 0);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v1.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v1 == 0);
// Assignment to an empty function
v1 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation and self-assignment
global_int = 0;
v1 = v1;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v1 = five;
// Invocation and self-assignment
global_int = 0;
v1 = (v1);
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear
v1 = 0;
BOOST_TEST(0 == v1);
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v1 = BOOST_FUNCTION_TARGET_FIX(&) write_five;
BOOST_TEST(0 != v1);
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v1 = BOOST_FUNCTION_TARGET_FIX(&) write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v1 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v1 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Construction from another function (that is empty)
v1.clear();
func_void_type v2(v1);
BOOST_TEST(!v2? true : false);
// Assignment to an empty function
v2 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v2 = (five);
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
v2.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v2.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v2 = (BOOST_FUNCTION_TARGET_FIX(&) write_five);
BOOST_TEST(v2? true : false);
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v2 = BOOST_FUNCTION_TARGET_FIX(&) write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Swapping
v1 = five;
swap(v1, v2);
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
swap(v1, v2);
v1.clear();
// Assignment
v2 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v2 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a function from an empty function
v2 = v1;
BOOST_TEST(v2.empty());
// Assignment to a function from a function with a functor
v1 = three;
v2 = v1;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assign to a function from a function with a function
v2 = BOOST_FUNCTION_TARGET_FIX(&) write_five;
v1 = v2;
BOOST_TEST(!v1.empty());
BOOST_TEST(!v2.empty());
global_int = 0;
v1();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
global_int = 0;
v2();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construct a function given another function containing a function
func_void_type v3(v1);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v3.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!v3? true : false);
// Assignment to an empty function
v3 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v3 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v3.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v3.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v3 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v3 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v3 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v3.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v3();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construction of a function from a function containing a functor
func_void_type v4(v3);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v4.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v4.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v4 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v4 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v4.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v4.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v4 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v4 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v4 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v4.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v4();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construction of a function from a functor
func_void_type v5(five);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v5.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v5.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v5 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v5 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v5.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v5.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v5 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v5 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v5 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v5.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v5();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Construction of a function from a function
func_void_type v6(&write_five);
// Invocation of a function
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear() method
v6.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v6.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function
v6 = three;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment to a non-empty function
v6 = five;
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// clear()
v6.clear();
BOOST_TEST(v6.empty());
// Assignment to an empty function from a free function
v6 = &write_five;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Assignment to a non-empty function from a free function
v6 = &write_three;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 3);
// Assignment
v6 = five;
BOOST_TEST(!v6.empty());
// Invocation
global_int = 0;
v6();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 5);
// Const vs. non-const
write_const_1_nonconst_2 one_or_two;
const function<void ()> v7(one_or_two);
function<void ()> v8(one_or_two);
global_int = 0;
v7();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 2);
global_int = 0;
v8();
BOOST_TEST(global_int == 2);
// Test construction from 0 and comparison to 0
func_void_type v9(0);
BOOST_TEST(v9 == 0);
BOOST_TEST(0 == v9);
// Test return values
typedef function<int ()> func_int_type;
generate_five_obj gen_five;
generate_three_obj gen_three;
func_int_type i0(gen_five);
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 5);
i0 = gen_three;
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 3);
i0 = &generate_five;
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 5);
i0 = &generate_three;
BOOST_TEST(i0() == 3);
BOOST_TEST(i0? true : false);
i0.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!i0? true : false);
// Test return values with compatible types
typedef function<long ()> func_long_type;
func_long_type i1(gen_five);
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 5);
i1 = gen_three;
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 3);
i1 = &generate_five;
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 5);
i1 = &generate_three;
BOOST_TEST(i1() == 3);
BOOST_TEST(i1? true : false);
i1.clear();
BOOST_TEST(!i1? true : false);
}
static void
test_one_arg()
{
negate<int> neg;
function<int (int)> f1(neg);
BOOST_TEST(f1(5) == -5);
function<string (string)> id(&identity_str);
BOOST_TEST(id("str") == "str");
function<string (const char*)> id2(&identity_str);
BOOST_TEST(id2("foo") == "foo");
add_to_obj add_to(5);
function<int (int)> f2(add_to);
BOOST_TEST(f2(3) == 8);
const function<int (int)> cf2(add_to);
BOOST_TEST(cf2(3) == 8);
}
static void
test_two_args()
{
function<string (const string&, const string&)> cat(&string_cat);
BOOST_TEST(cat("str", "ing") == "string");
function<int (short, short)> sum(&sum_ints);
BOOST_TEST(sum(2, 3) == 5);
}
static void
test_emptiness()
{
function<float ()> f1;
BOOST_TEST(f1.empty());
function<float ()> f2;
f2 = f1;
BOOST_TEST(f2.empty());
function<double ()> f3;
f3 = f2;
BOOST_TEST(f3.empty());
}
struct X {
X(int v) : value(v) {}
int twice() const { return 2*value; }
int plus(int v) { return value + v; }
int value;
};
static void
test_member_functions()
{
boost::function<int (X*)> f1(&X::twice);
X one(1);
X five(5);
BOOST_TEST(f1(&one) == 2);
BOOST_TEST(f1(&five) == 10);
boost::function<int (X*)> f1_2;
f1_2 = &X::twice;
BOOST_TEST(f1_2(&one) == 2);
BOOST_TEST(f1_2(&five) == 10);
boost::function<int (X&, int)> f2(&X::plus);
BOOST_TEST(f2(one, 3) == 4);
BOOST_TEST(f2(five, 4) == 9);
}
struct add_with_throw_on_copy {
int operator()(int x, int y) const { return x+y; }
add_with_throw_on_copy() {}
add_with_throw_on_copy(const add_with_throw_on_copy&)
{
throw runtime_error("But this CAN'T throw");
}
add_with_throw_on_copy& operator=(const add_with_throw_on_copy&)
{
throw runtime_error("But this CAN'T throw");
}
};
static void
test_ref()
{
add_with_throw_on_copy atc;
try {
boost::function<int (int, int)> f(ref(atc));
BOOST_TEST(f(1, 3) == 4);
}
catch(runtime_error e) {
BOOST_ERROR("Nonthrowing constructor threw an exception");
}
}
static int alloc_count = 0;
static int dealloc_count = 0;
template<typename T>
struct counting_allocator : public allocator<T>
{
template<typename U>
struct rebind
{
typedef counting_allocator<U> other;
};
T* allocate(size_t n)
{
alloc_count++;
return allocator<T>::allocate(n);
}
void deallocate(T* p, size_t n)
{
dealloc_count++;
allocator<T>::deallocate(p, n);
}
};
static int do_minus(int x, int y) { return x-y; }
struct DoNothing
{
void operator()() const {}
};
static void do_nothing() {}
static void test_allocator()
{
#ifndef BOOST_NO_STD_ALLOCATOR
boost::function<int (int, int), counting_allocator<int> > f;
f = plus<int>();
f.clear();
BOOST_TEST(alloc_count == 1);
BOOST_TEST(dealloc_count == 1);
alloc_count = 0;
dealloc_count = 0;
f = &do_minus;
f.clear();
boost::function<void (), counting_allocator<int> > fv;
alloc_count = 0;
dealloc_count = 0;
fv = DoNothing();
fv.clear();
BOOST_TEST(alloc_count == 1);
BOOST_TEST(dealloc_count == 1);
alloc_count = 0;
dealloc_count = 0;
fv = &do_nothing;
fv.clear();
#endif // ndef BOOST_NO_STD_ALLOCATOR
}
static void test_exception()
{
boost::function<int (int, int)> f;
try {
f(5, 4);
BOOST_TEST(false);
}
catch(boost::bad_function_call) {
// okay
}
}
typedef boost::function< void * (void * reader) > reader_type;
typedef std::pair<int, reader_type> mapped_type;
static void test_implicit()
{
mapped_type m;
m = mapped_type();
}
static void test_call_obj(boost::function<int (int, int)> f)
{
assert(!f.empty());
}
static void test_call_cref(const boost::function<int (int, int)>& f)
{
assert(!f.empty());
}
static void test_call()
{
test_call_obj(std::plus<int>());
test_call_cref(std::plus<int>());
}
int test_main(int, char* [])
{
test_zero_args();
test_one_arg();
test_two_args();
test_emptiness();
test_member_functions();
test_ref();
test_allocator();
test_exception();
test_implicit();
test_call();
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost;
int
test_main(int, char*[])
{
function0<int> f1;
function0<int> f2;
if (f1 == f2) {
}
BOOST_CRITICAL_ERROR("This should not have compiled.");
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost;
static int bad_fn(float f) { return static_cast<int>(f); }
int
test_main(int, char*[])
{
function0<int> f1;
f1 = bad_fn;
BOOST_CRITICAL_ERROR("This should not have compiled.");
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2002-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <iostream>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/lambda/lambda.hpp>
#include <boost/lambda/bind.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost;
using namespace boost::lambda;
static unsigned
func_impl(int arg1, bool arg2, double arg3)
{
return abs (static_cast<int>((arg2 ? arg1 : 2 * arg1) * arg3));
}
int test_main(int, char*[])
{
function <unsigned(bool, double)> f1 = bind(func_impl, 15, _1, _2);
function <unsigned(double)> f2 = bind(f1, false, _1);
function <unsigned()> f3 = bind(f2, 4.0);
f3();
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
struct X {
int foo(int);
};
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
boost::function<int (X*, int)> f;
f = &X::foo;
X x;
f(&x, 5);
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
struct X {
int foo(int);
};
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
boost::function2<int, X*, int> f;
f = &X::foo;
X x;
f(&x, 5);
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function regression test configuration file
// From the boost/status directory, run
// ./regression --tests ../libs/function/test/regression.cfg -o function.html
run libs/function/test/allocator_test.cpp
run libs/function/test/function_n_test.cpp
run libs/function/test/function_test.cpp
compile-fail libs/function/test/function_test_fail1.cpp
compile-fail libs/function/test/function_test_fail2.cpp
run libs/function/test/mixin_test.cpp
run libs/function/test/policy_test.cpp
run libs/function/test/stateless_test.cpp

View File

@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
// Boost.Function library
// Copyright Doug Gregor 2001-2003. Use, modification and
// distribution is subject to the Boost Software License, Version
// 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org
#include <boost/test/minimal.hpp>
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <stdexcept>
struct stateless_integer_add {
int operator()(int x, int y) const { return x+y; }
void* operator new(std::size_t, stateless_integer_add*)
{
throw std::runtime_error("Cannot allocate a stateless_integer_add");
}
void operator delete(void*, stateless_integer_add*) throw()
{
}
};
namespace boost {
template<>
struct is_stateless<stateless_integer_add> {
BOOST_STATIC_CONSTANT(bool, value = true);
};
}
int test_main(int, char*[])
{
boost::function2<int, int, int> f;
f = stateless_integer_add();
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
struct X {
int foo(int);
};
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
boost::function<int (int)> f;
X x;
f = std::bind1st(
std::mem_fun(&X::foo), &x);
f(5); // Call x.foo(5)
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
struct X {
int foo(int);
};
int X::foo(int x) { return -x; }
int main()
{
boost::function1<int, int> f;
X x;
f = std::bind1st(
std::mem_fun(&X::foo), &x);
f(5); // Call x.foo(5)
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
void do_sum_avg(int values[], int n, int& sum, float& avg)
{
sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
sum += values[i];
avg = (float)sum / n;
}
int main()
{
boost::function<void (int values[], int n, int& sum, float& avg)> sum_avg;
sum_avg = &do_sum_avg;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
// Function library
// Copyright (C) 2001-2003 Douglas Gregor
// Use, modification and distribution is subject to the Boost Software
// License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at
// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
// For more information, see http://www.boost.org/
#include <boost/function.hpp>
#include <iostream>
void do_sum_avg(int values[], int n, int& sum, float& avg)
{
sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
sum += values[i];
avg = (float)sum / n;
}
int main()
{
boost::function4<void, int*, int, int&, float&> sum_avg;
sum_avg = &do_sum_avg;
return 0;
}