std::experimental::invocation_type, std::experimental::raw_invocation_type
Defined in header <experimental/type_traits>
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||
template<class> struct raw_invocation_type; //undefined |
(1) | (library fundamentals TS) |
template<class> struct invocation_type; //undefined |
(2) | (library fundamentals TS) |
Computes the invocation parameters when Fn
is called with the arguments ArgTypes...
, as in INVOKE(std::declval<Fn>(), std::declval<ArgTypes>()...), where INVOKE is the operation defined in Callable.
The invocation parameters of the expression INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ..., tN) is defined as follows, where T1
is the (possibly cv-qualified) type of t1
and U1
is T1&
if t1
is an lvalue and T1&&
otherwise:
- If
f
is a pointer to a member function of a classT
, then the invocation parameters areU1
followed by the parameters off
matched byt2, ..., tN
. - If
N == 1
andf
is a pointer to member data of a classT
, then the invocation parameter isU1
. - If
f
is an object of class type, the invocation parameters are the parameters matchingt1, ..., tN
of the best viable function for the argumentst1, ..., tN
among the function call operators and surrogate call functions off
. - In all other cases, the invocations parameters are the parameters of
f
matchingt1, ..., tN
.
If an argument tI
matches an ellipsis in the function's parameter list, the corresponding invocation parameter is the result of applying the default argument promotions to tI
.
Fn
and all types in ArgTypes
can be any complete type, array of unknown bound, or (possibly cv-qualified) void
.
Member types
Member type | Definition |
raw_invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>::type | R(T1, T2, ...), where:
Only defined if |
invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>::type | R(U1, U2, ...), where
Only defined if |
Helper types
template< class T > using raw_invocation_type_t = typename raw_invocation_type<T>::type; |
(library fundamentals TS) | |
template< class T > using invocation_type_t = typename invocation_type<T>::type; |
(library fundamentals TS) | |
Example
This section is incomplete Reason: no example |