TOC will be added in the final post, since github doesn't recognize [TOC] option...
This file is published as bfilipek.com/C++17 features blog post.
The list is mostly done! Still some descriptions could be improved or more example could be provided.
If you have code examples, better explanations or any ideas, let me know! I am happy to update the current post so that it has some real value for others.
The plan is to have a list of features with some basic explanation, little example (if possible) and some additional resources, plus a note about availability in compilers. Probably, most of the features might require separate articles or even whole chapters in books, so the list here will be only a jump start.
The list comes from the following resources:
- SO: What are the new features in C++17?
- cppreference.com/C++ compiler support.
- AnthonyCalandra/modern-cpp-features cheat sheet - unfortunately it doesn't include all the features of C++17, so this is also why I've started a separate try on that.
- plus other findings and mentions
And one of the most important resource: Working Draft, Standard for Programming Language C++
Plus there's an official list of changes: P0636r0: Changes between C++14 and C++17 DIS
I am also working on a bit detailed series:
- Fixes and deprecation
- Language clarification
- Templates
- Attributes
- Simplification
- Library changes - Filesystem
- Library changes - Parallel STL
- Library changes - Utils (soon)
- Wrap up, Bonus (soon)
| GCC: 5.0 | Clang: 3.8 | MSVC: 14.0 |
|---|
Fixes some cases with auto type deduction. The full background can be found in Auto and braced-init-lists, by Ville Voutilainen.
It fixes the problem of deducing std::initializer_list like:
auto x = foo(); // copy-initialization
auto x{foo}; // direct-initialization, initializes an initializer_list
int x = foo(); // copy-initialization
int x{foo}; // direct-initializationAnd for the direct initialization, new rules are:
- For a braced-init-list with only a single element, auto deduction will deduce from that entry;
- For a braced-init-list with more than one element, auto deduction will be ill-formed.
Basically, auto x { 1 }; will be now deduced as int, but before it was an initializer list.
| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 2.5 | MSVC: 15.0 preview 5 |
|---|
Self-explanatory. It allows just to have the condition without passing the message, version with the message will also be available. It will be compatible with other asserts like BOOST_STATIC_ASSERT (that didn't take any message from the start).
| GCC: 5.0 | Clang: 3.5 | MSVC: 14.0 |
|---|
Allows you to use typename instead of class when declaring a template template parameter. Normal type parameters can use them interchangeably, but template template parameters were restricted to class, so this change unifies these forms somewhat.
template <template <typename...> typename Container>
// used to be invalid ^^^^^^^^
struct foo;
foo<std::vector> my_foo;| GCC: 5.1 | Clang: 3.5 | MSVC: Yes |
|---|
Removes ??=, ??(, ??>, ...
Makes the implementation a bit simpler, see MSDN Trigraphs
| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.6 | MSVC: 14.3 |
|---|
Allows to write:
namespace A::B::C {
//…
}Rather than:
namespace A {
namespace B {
namespace C {
//…
}
}
}| GCC: 4.9 (namespaces)/ 6 (enums) | Clang: 3.4 | MSVC: 14.0 |
|---|
Permits attributes on enumerators and namespaces. More details in N4196.
enum E {
foobar = 0,
foobat [[deprecated]] = foobar
};
E e = foobat; // Emits warning
namespace [[deprecated]] old_stuff{
void legacy();
}
old_stuff::legacy(); // Emits warning| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.6 | MSVC: 14.0 |
|---|
UTF-8 character literal, e.g.
u8'a'. Such literal has typecharand the value equal to ISO 10646 code point value of c-char, provided that the code point value is representable with a single UTF-8 code unit. If c-char is not in Basic Latin or C0 Controls Unicode block, the program is ill-formed.
The compiler will report errors if character cannot fit inside u8 ASCII range.
Reference:
- cppreference.com/character literal
- SO: What is the point of the UTF-8 character literals proposed for C++17?
| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.6 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Remove syntactic restrictions for pointers, references, and pointers to members that appears as non-type template parameters:
For instance:
template<int *p> struct A {};
int n;
A<&n> a; // ok
constexpr int *p() { return &n; }
A<p()> b; // error before C++17| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.6 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
More background here in P0036
Allows to write compact code with variadic templates without using explicit recursion.
Example:
template<typename... Args>
auto SumWithOne(Args... args){
return (1 + ... + args);
}Articles:
- Bartek's coding blog: C++17 in details: Templates
- C++ Truths: Folding Monadic Functions
- Simon Brand: Exploding tuples with fold expressions
- Baptiste Wicht: C++17 Fold Expressions
- Fold Expressions - ModernesCpp.com
| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
If the parameter pack is empty then the value of the fold is:
| Operator | Value |
|---|---|
| && | true |
| || | false |
| , | void() |
For any operator not listed above, an unary fold expression with an empty parameter pack is ill-formed.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.8 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
The register keyword was deprecated in the 2011 C++ standard. C++17 tries to clear the standard, so the keyword is now removed. This keyword is reserved now and might be repurposed in the future revisions.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.8 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
The ++ operator for bool was deprecated in the original 1998 C++ standard, and it is past time to remove it formally.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Dynamic exception specifications were deprecated in C++11. This paper formally proposes removing the feature from C++17, while retaining the (still) deprecated throw() specification strictly as an alias for noexcept(true).
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Previously exception specifications for a function didn't belong to the type of the function, but it will be part of it.
We'll get an error in the case:
void (*p)();
void (**pp)() noexcept = &p; // error: cannot convert to pointer to noexcept function
struct S { typedef void (*p)(); operator p(); };
void (*q)() noexcept = S(); // error: cannot convert to pointer to noexcept function| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
If a class was derived from some other type you couldn't use aggregate initialization. But now the restriction is removed.
struct base { int a1, a2; };
struct derived : base { int b1; };
derived d1{{1, 2}, 3}; // full explicit initialization
derived d1{{}, 1}; // the base is value initializedTo sum up: from the standard:
An aggregate is an array or a class with:
- no user-provided constructors (including those inherited from a base class),
- no private or protected non-static data members (Clause 11),
- no base classes (Clause 10) and // removed now!
- no virtual functions (10.3), and
- no virtual, private or protected base classes (10.1).
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
this pointer is implicitly captured by lambdas inside member functions (if you use a default capture, like [&] or [=]). Member variables are always accessed by this pointer.
Example:
struct S {
int x ;
void f() {
// The following lambda captures are currently identical
auto a = [&]() { x = 42 ; } // OK: transformed to (*this).x
auto b = [=]() { x = 43 ; } // OK: transformed to (*this).x
a();
assert( x == 42 );
b();
assert( x == 43 );
}
};Now you can use *this when declaring a lambda, for example auto b = [=, *this]() { x = 43 ; }. That way this is captured by value. Note that the form [&,this] is redundant but accepted for compatibility with ISO C++14.
Capturing by value might be especially important for async invocation, paraller processing.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
Other name for this feature was "Using non-standard attributes" in P0028R3 and PDF: P0028R2 (rationale, examples).
Simplifies the case where you want to use multiple attributes, like:
void f() {
[[rpr::kernel, rpr::target(cpu,gpu)]] // repetition
do-task();
}Proposed change:
void f() {
[[using rpr: kernel, target(cpu,gpu)]]
do-task();
}That simplification might help when building tools that automatically translate annotated such code into a different programming models.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
In the following example:
class alignas(16) float4 {
float f[4];
};
float4 *p = new float4[1000];C++11/14 did not specify any mechanism by which over-aligned data can be dynamically allocated correctly (i.e. respecting the alignment of the data). In the example above, not only is an implementation of C++ not required to allocate properly-aligned memory for the array, for practical purposes it is very nearly required to do the allocation incorrectly.
C++17 fixes that hole by introducing additional memory allocation functions that use align parameter:
void* operator new(std::size_t, std::align_val_t);
void* operator new[](std::size_t, std::align_val_t);
void operator delete(void*, std::align_val_t);
void operator delete[](void*, std::align_val_t);
void operator delete(void*, std::size_t, std::align_val_t);
void operator delete[](void*, std::size_t, std::align_val_t);__has_include in preprocessor conditionals
| GCC: 5.0 | Clang: yes | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
This feature allows a C++ program to directly, reliably and portably determine whether or not a library header is available for inclusion.
Example: This demonstrates a way to use a library optional facility only if it is available.
#if __has_include(<optional>)
# include <optional>
# define have_optional 1
#elif __has_include(<experimental/optional>)
# include <experimental/optional>
# define have_optional 1
# define experimental_optional 1
#else
# define have_optional 0
#endif| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: not yet | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Before C++17, template deduction worked for functions but not for classes. For instance, the following code was legal:
void f(std::pair<int, char>);
f(std::make_pair(42, 'z'));because std::make_pair is a template function (so we can perform teplate deduction).
But the following wasn't:
void f(std::pair<int, char>);
f(std::pair(42, 'z'));Although it is semantically equivalent. This was not legal because std::pair is a template class, and template classes could not apply type deduction in their initialization.
So before C++17 one has to write out the types explicitly, even though this does not add any new information:
void f(std::pair<int, char>);
f(std::pair<int, char>(42, 'z'));This is fixed in C++17 where template class constructors can deduce type parameters. The syntax for constructing such template classes is therefore consistent with the syntax for constructing non-template classes.
todo: deduction guides.
- Bartek's coding blog: C++17 in details: Templates
- A 4 min episode of C++ Weekly on class template argument type deduction
- A 4 min episode of C++ Weekly on deduction guides
- Modern C++ Features - Class Template Argument Deduction -
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Automatically deduce type on non-type template parameters.
template <auto value> void f() { }
f<10>(); // deduces intTrip report: Summer ISO C++ standards meeting (Oulu) | Sutter’s Mill
Copy elision for temporary objects, not for Named RVO.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Articles:
- Bartek's coding blog: C++17 in details: language clarifications
- Jonas Devlieghere: Guaranteed Copy Elision
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
More description and reasoning in P0136R0. Some excerpts below:
An inheriting constructor does not act like any other form of using-declaration. All other using-declarations make some set of declarations visible to name lookup in another context, but an inheriting constructor declaration declares a new constructor that merely delegates to the original.
This feature changes inheriting constructor declaration from declaring a set of new constructors, to making a set of base class constructors visible in a derived class as if they were derived class constructors. (When such a constructor is used, the additional derived class subobjects will also be implicitly constructed as if by a defaulted default constructor). Put another way: make inheriting a constructor act just like inheriting any other base class member, to the extent possible.
This change does affect the meaning and validity of some programs, but these changes improve the consistency and comprehensibility of C++.
// Hiding works the same as for other member
// using-declarations in the presence of default arguments
struct A {
A(int a, int b = 0);
void f(int a, int b = 0);
};
struct B : A {
B(int a); using A::A;
void f(int a); using A::f;
};
struct C : A {
C(int a, int b = 0); using A::A;
void f(int a, int b = 0); using A::f;
};
B b(0); // was ok, now ambiguous
b.f(0); // ambiguous (unchanged)
C c(0); // was ambiguous, now ok
c.f(0); // ok (unchanged)
// Inheriting constructor parameters are no longer copied
struct A { A(const A&) = delete; A(int); };
struct B { B(A); void f(A); };
struct C : B { using B::B; using B::f; };
C c({0}); // was ill-formed, now ok (no copy made)
c.f({0}); // ok (unchanged)| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
Allows to initialize enum class with a fixed underlying type:
enum class Handle : uint32_t { Invalid = 0 };
Handle h { 42 }; // OKAllows to create 'strong types' that are easy to use...
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
In a nutshell, given an expression such as f(a, b, c), the order in which the sub-expressions f, a, b, c (which are of arbitrary shapes) are evaluated is left unspecified by the standard.
// unspecified behaviour below!
f(i++, i);
v[i] = i++;
std::map<int, int> m;
m[0] = m.size(); // {{0, 0}} or {{0, 1}} ?Summary of changes:
- Postfix expressions are evaluated from left to right. This includes functions calls and member selection expressions.
- Assignment expressions are evaluated from right to left. This includes compound assignments.
- Operands to shift operators are evaluated from left to right.
Reference:
- Bartek's coding blog: C++17 in details: language clarifications
- C++ Order of evaluation, cppreference
- SO: What are the evaluation order guarantees introduced by C++17?
- How compact code can become buggy code: getting caught by the order of evaluations, Fluent C++
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: not yet | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
consexpr can be used in the context of lambdas.
constexpr auto ID = [] (int n) { return n; };
constexpr int I = ID(3);
static_assert(I == 3);
constexpr int AddEleven(int n) {
// Initialization of the 'data member' for n can
// occur within a constant expression since 'n' is
// of literal type.
return [n] { return n + 11; }();
}
static_assert(AddEleven(5) == 16);Articles
- A 5 min episode of Jason Turner's C++ Weekly about constexpr lambdas
- Lambda expression comparison between C++11, C++14 and C++17
| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.6 | MSVC: 15.0 Preview 5 |
|---|
Changing the definition of range based for from:
{
auto && __range = for-range-initializer;
for ( auto __begin = begin-expr,
__end = end-expr;
__begin != __end;
++__begin ) {
for-range-declaration = *__begin;
statement
}
}Into:
{
auto && __range = for-range-initializer;
auto __begin = begin-expr;
auto __end = end-expr;
for ( ; __begin != __end; ++__begin ) {
for-range-declaration = *__begin;
statement
}
}Types of __begin and __end might be different; only the comparison operator is required. This little change allows Range TS users a better experience.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.0 Preview 4 |
|---|
Indicates that a fallthrough in a switch statement is intentional and a warning should not be issued for it. More details in P0068R0.
switch (c) {
case 'a':
f(); // Warning emitted, fallthrough is perhaps a programmer error
case 'b':
g();
[[fallthrough]]; // Warning suppressed, fallthrough is intentional
case 'c':
h();
}| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
[[nodiscard]] is used to stress that the return value of a function is not to be discarded, on pain of a compiler warning. More details in P0068R0.
[[nodiscard]] int foo();
void bar() {
foo(); // Warning emitted, return value of a nodiscard function is discarded
}This attribute can also be applied to types in order to mark all functions which return that type as [[nodiscard]]:
[[nodiscard]] struct DoNotThrowMeAway{};
DoNotThrowMeAway i_promise();
void oops() {
i_promise(); // Warning emitted, return value of a nodiscard function is discarded
}Articles:
- Bartek's coding blog: Enforcing code contracts with [[nodiscard]]
- A 4 min video about nodiscard in Jason Turner's C++ Weekly
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
Suppresses compiler warnings about unused entities when they are declared with [[maybe_unused]]. More details in P0068R0.
static void impl1() { ... } // Compilers may warn about this
[[maybe_unused]] static void impl2() { ... } // Warning suppressed
void foo() {
int x = 42; // Compilers may warn about this
[[maybe_unused]] int y = 42; // Warning suppressed
}A 3 min video about maybe_unused in Jason Turner's C++ Weekly
| GCC: Yes | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Clarifies that implementations should ignore any attribute namespaces which they do not support, as this used to be unspecified. More details in P0283R1.
//compilers which don't support MyCompilerSpecificNamespace will ignore this attribute
[[MyCompilerSpecificNamespace::do_special_thing]]
void foo();| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Allows you to inject names with using-declarations from all types in a parameter pack.
In order to expose operator() from all base classes in a variadic template, we used to have to resort to recursion:
template <typename T, typename... Ts>
struct Overloader : T, Overloader<Ts...> {
using T::operator();
using Overloader<Ts...>::operator();
// […]
};
template <typename T> struct Overloader<T> : T {
using T::operator();
};Now we can simply expand the parameter pack in the using-declaration:
template <typename... Ts>
struct Overloader : Ts... {
using Ts::operator()...;
// […]
};Remarks
- Implemented in GCC 7.0, see this change.
P0217R3 P0615R0: Renaming for structured bindings
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
Helps when using tuples as a return type. It will automatically create variables and tie them. More details in P0144R0. The name "Decomposition Declaration" was also used, but finally the standard agrees to use "Structured Binding Declarations" (section 11.5)
For example:
int a = 0;
double b = 0.0;
long c = 0;
std::tie(a, b, c) = tuple; // a, b, c need to be declared firstNow we can write:
auto [ a, b, c ] = tuple;Such expressions also work on structs, pairs, and arrays.
Articles:
- Steve Lorimer, C++17 Structured Bindings
- jrb-programming, Emulating C++17 Structured Bindings in C++14
- Simon Brand, Adding C++17 decomposition declaration support to your classes
| GCC: 3.0 | Clang: Yes | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Allows to express some special floating point values, for example, the smallest normal IEEE-754 single precision value is readily written as 0x1.0p-126.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
New versions of the if and switch statements for C++: if (init; condition) and switch (init; condition).
This should simplify the code. For example, previously you had to write:
{
auto val = GetValue();
if (condition(val))
// on success
else
// on false...
}Look, that val has a separate scope, without it it will 'leak'.
Now you can write:
if (auto val = GetValue(); condition(val))
// on success
else
// on false...val is visible only inside the if and else statements, so it doesn't 'leak'.
condition might be any condition, not only if val is true/false.
Examples:
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
Previously only methods/functions could be specified as inline, now you can do the same with variables, inside a header file.
A variable declared inline has the same semantics as a function declared inline: it can be defined, identically, in multiple translation units, must be defined in every translation unit in which it is used, and the behavior of the program is as if there is exactly one variable.
struct MyClass
{
static const int sValue;
};
inline int const MyClass::sValue = 777;Or even:
struct MyClass
{
inline static const int sValue = 777;
};Articles
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 4.0 | MSVC: not yet |
|---|
This feature resolves Core issue CWG 150.
From the paper:
This paper allows a template template-parameter to bind to a template argument whenever the template parameter is at least as specialized as the template argument. This implies that any template argument list that can legitimately be applied to the template template-parameter is also applicable to the argument template.
Example:
template <template <int> class> void FI();
template <template <auto> class> void FA();
template <auto> struct SA { /* ... */ };
template <int> struct SI { /* ... */ };
FI<SA>(); // OK; error before this paper
FA<SI>(); // error
template <template <typename> class> void FD();
template <typename, typename = int> struct SD { /* ... */ };
FD<SD>(); // OK; error before this paper (CWG 150)(Adapted from the comment by IncongruentModulo1) For a useful example, consider something like this:
template <template <typename> typename Container>
struct A
{
Container<int> m_ints;
Container<double> m_doubles;
};In C++14 and earlier, A<std::vector> wouldn't be valid (ignoring the typename and not class before container) since std::vector is declared as:
template <typename T, typename Allocator = std::allocator<T>> class vector;
This change resolves that issue. Before, you would need to declare template <template <typename...> typename Container>, which is more permissive and moves the error to a less explicit line (namely the declaration of m_ints wherever the struct A is implemented / declared, instead of where the struct is instantiated with the wrong template type.
| GCC: 6.0 | Clang: 3.7 | MSVC: 14.0 |
|---|
More background in the original paper: PDF: N4152 and GOTW issue 47: Uncaught Exceptions.
The function returns the number of uncaught exception objects in the current thread.
This might be useful when implementing proper Scope Guards that works also during stack unwinding.
A type that wants to know whether its destructor is being run to unwind this object can query uncaught_exceptions in its constructor and store the result, then query uncaught_exceptions again in its destructor; if the result is different, then this destructor is being invoked as part of stack unwinding due to a new exception that was thrown later than the object’s construction
The above quote comes from PDF: N4152.
| GCC: 7.0 | Clang: 3.9 | MSVC: 15.3 |
|---|
The static-if for C++! This allows you to discard branches of an if statement at compile-time based on a constant expression condition.
if constexpr(cond)
statement1; // Discarded if cond is false
else
statement2; // Discarded if cond is trueThis removes a lot of the necessity for tag dispatching and SFINAE:
template <typename T, std::enable_if_t<std::is_arithmetic<T>{}>* = nullptr>
auto get_value(T t) {/*...*/}
template <typename T, std::enable_if_t<!std::is_arithmetic<T>{}>* = nullptr>
auto get_value(T t) {/*...*/}template <typename T>
auto get_value(T t, std::true_type) {/*...*/}
template <typename T>
auto get_value(T t, std::false_type) {/*...*/}
template <typename T>
auto get_value(T t) {
return get_value(t, std::is_arithmetic<T>{});
}template <typename T>
auto get_value(T t) {
if constexpr (std::is_arithmetic_v<T>) {
//...
}
else {
//...
}
}Articles:
- Bartek's coding blog: Simplify code with 'if constexpr' in C++17
- LoopPerfect Blog, C++17 vs C++14 - Round 1 - if-constexpr
- SO: constexpr if and static_assert
- Simon Brand: Simplifying templates and #ifdefs with if constexpr
To get more details about library implementation I suggest those links:
- VS 2015 Update 2’s STL is C++17-so-far Feature Complete - Jan 2016
- libstdc++, C++ 201z status
- libc++ C++1z Status
This section only mentions some of the most important parts of library changes, it would be too impractical to go into details of every little change.
We get the following items:
- Tuples - Calling a function with a tuple of arguments
- Functional Objects - Searchers
- Optional objects
- Class any
- string_view
- Memory:
- Shared-ownership pointers
- Class memory_resource
- Class memory_resource
- Access to program-wide memory_resource objects
- Pool resource classes
- Class monotonic_buffer_resource
- Alias templates using polymorphic memory resources
- Algorithms:
- Search
- Sampling
shared_ptrnatively handles arrays: see Merging shared_ptr changes from Library Fundamentals to C++17
The wording from those components comes from Library Fundamentals V2 to ensure the wording includes the latest corrections.
Resources:
- Marco Arena, string_view odi et amo
- Bartek's coding blog: C++17 in details: Standard Library Utilities
Removal of some deprecated types and functions, including std::auto_ptr, std::random_shuffle, and old function adaptors
- Function objects - unary_function/binary_function, ptr_fun(), and mem_fun()/mem_fun_ref()
- Binders - bind1st()/bind2nd()
- auto_ptr
- Random shuffle - random_shuffle(first, last) and random_shuffle(first, last, rng)
Parralel versions/overloads of most of std algorithms. Plus a few new algorithms, like reduce, transform_reduce, for_each.
std::vector<int> v = genLargeVector();
// standard sequential sort
std::sort(v.begin(), v.end());
// explicitly sequential sort
std::sort(std::seq, v.begin(), v.end());
// permitting parallel execution
std::sort(std::par, v.begin(), v.end());
// permitting vectorization as well
std::sort(std::par_unseq, v.begin(), v.end());Articles:
- Bartek's coding blog: C++17 in details: Parallel Algorithms
- Parallel Algorithm of the Standard Template Library - ModernesCpp.com
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
fs::path pathToShow(/* ... */);
cout << "exists() = " << fs::exists(pathToShow) << "\n"
<< "root_name() = " << pathToShow.root_name() << "\n"
<< "root_path() = " << pathToShow.root_path() << "\n"
<< "relative_path() = " << pathToShow.relative_path() << "\n"
<< "parent_path() = " << pathToShow.parent_path() << "\n"
<< "filename() = " << pathToShow.filename() << "\n"
<< "stem() = " << pathToShow.stem() << "\n"
<< "extension() = " << pathToShow.extension() << "\n";Articles:
Improving std::pair and std::tuple
std::shared_mutex (untimed)
Variant is a typesafe union that will report errors when you want to access something that's not currently inside the object.
Notes:
- Variant is not allowed to allocate additional (dynamic) memory.
- A variant is not permitted to hold references, arrays, or the type void.
- A variant is default initialized with the value of its first alternative.
- If the first alternative type is not default constructible, then the variant must use std::monostate as the first alternative
Have a look at more example in a separate article: C++17 in details: Standard Library Utilities -> Variant
From Herb Sutter, Oulu trip report:
You will now be able to directly move internal nodes from one node-based container directly into another container of the same type. Why is that important? Because it guarantees no memory allocation overhead, no copying of keys or values, and even no exceptions if the container’s comparison function doesn’t throw.