lumiera_/src/lib/meta/trait.hpp

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/*
TRAIT.hpp - type handling and type detection helpers
Copyright (C) Lumiera.org
2009, Hermann Vosseler <Ichthyostega@web.de>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
#ifndef LIB_META_TRAIT_H
#define LIB_META_TRAIT_H
#include "lib/meta/util.hpp"
#include "lib/meta/duck-detector.hpp"
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#include "lib/wrapper.hpp" ////////////////////////TODO only because of AssignableRefWrapper -- can we get rid of this import?
#include <boost/type_traits/is_convertible.hpp>
#include <boost/type_traits/is_arithmetic.hpp>
#include <boost/utility/enable_if.hpp>
#include <string>
namespace lib {
namespace meta {
/** Trait template for detecting if a type can be converted to string.
* For example, this allows to write specialisations with the help of
* boost::enable_if
*/
template <typename TY>
struct can_ToString
{
enum { value = boost::is_convertible<TY, std::string>::value
};
};
/** Trait template for guarding \c lexical_cast<..> expressions.
* Such an expression won't even compile for some types, because of
* missing or ambiguous output operator(s).
* Ideally, there would be some automatic detection (relying on the
* existence of an operator<< for the given type. But I couldn't make
* this work, so I fell back on just declaring types which are known
* to work with lexical_cast to string
* @note this compile-time trait can't predict if such an conversion
* to string will be successful at runtime; indeed it may throw,
* so you should additionally guard the invocation with try-catch!
*/
template<typename X>
struct can_lexical2string
{
enum { value = boost::is_arithmetic<X>::value
};
};
/** Trait template to detect a type usable with the STL for-each loop.
* Basically we're looking for the functions to get the begin/end iterator
*/
template<typename T>
class can_STL_ForEach
{
struct is_iterable
{
META_DETECT_NESTED(iterator);
META_DETECT_FUNCTION(typename X::iterator, begin,(void));
META_DETECT_FUNCTION(typename X::iterator, end ,(void));
enum { value = HasNested_iterator<T>::value
&& HasFunSig_begin<T>::value
&& HasFunSig_end<T>::value
};
};
struct is_const_iterable
{
META_DETECT_NESTED(const_iterator);
META_DETECT_FUNCTION(typename X::const_iterator, begin,(void) const);
META_DETECT_FUNCTION(typename X::const_iterator, end ,(void) const);
enum { value = HasNested_const_iterator<T>::value
&& HasFunSig_begin<T>::value
&& HasFunSig_end<T>::value
};
};
public:
enum { value = is_iterable::value
|| is_const_iterable::value
};
};
/** Trait template to detect a type usable immediately as
* "Lumiera Forward Iterator" in a specialised for-each loop
* This is just a heuristic, based on some common properties
* of such iterators; it is enough to distinguish it from an
* STL container, but can certainly be refined.
*/
template<typename T>
class can_IterForEach
{
META_DETECT_NESTED(value_type);
META_DETECT_OPERATOR_DEREF();
META_DETECT_OPERATOR_INC();
public:
enum{ value = boost::is_convertible<T, bool>::value
&& HasNested_value_type<T>::value
&& HasOperator_deref<T>::value
&& HasOperator_inc<T>::value
};
};
/** Type definition helper for pointer and reference types.
* Allows to create a member field and to get the basic type
* irrespective if the given type is plain, pointer or reference
*/
template<typename TY>
struct RefTraits
{
typedef TY* pointer;
typedef TY& reference;
typedef TY value_type;
typedef value_type member_type;
};
template<typename TY>
struct RefTraits<TY *>
{
typedef TY* pointer;
typedef TY& reference;
typedef TY value_type;
typedef pointer member_type;
};
template<typename TY>
struct RefTraits<TY &>
{
typedef TY* pointer;
typedef TY& reference;
typedef TY value_type;
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typedef lib::wrapper::AssignableRefWrapper<TY> member_type;
};
//////////////////////////////////////////TODO: member_type not needed anymore 12/09 -- obsolete? useful? keep it?
}} // namespace lib::meta
#endif