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89 lines
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ReStructuredText
89 lines
2.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. Distributed under the Boost
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.. Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying
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.. file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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``pointee`` and ``indirect_reference``
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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:Author: David Abrahams
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:Contact: dave@boost-consulting.com
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:organization: `Boost Consulting`_
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:date: $Date$
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:copyright: Copyright David Abrahams 2004.
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.. _`Boost Consulting`: http://www.boost-consulting.com
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:abstract: Provides the capability to deduce the referent types of
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pointers, smart pointers and iterators in generic code.
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Overview
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========
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Have you ever wanted to write a generic function that can operate
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on any kind of dereferenceable object? If you have, you've
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probably run into the problem of how to determine the type that the
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object "points at":
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.. parsed-literal::
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template <class Dereferenceable>
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void f(Dereferenceable p)
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{
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*what-goes-here?* value = \*p;
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...
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}
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``pointee``
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-----------
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It turns out to be impossible to come up with a fully-general
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algorithm to do determine *what-goes-here* directly, but it is
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possible to require that ``pointee<Dereferenceable>::type`` is
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correct. Naturally, ``pointee`` has the same difficulty: it can't
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determine the appropriate ``::type`` reliably for all
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``Dereferenceable``\ s, but it makes very good guesses (it works
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for all pointers, standard and boost smart pointers, and
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iterators), and when it guesses wrongly, it can be specialized as
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necessary::
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namespace boost
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{
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template <class T>
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struct pointee<third_party_lib::smart_pointer<T> >
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{
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typedef T type;
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};
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}
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``indirect_reference``
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----------------------
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``indirect_reference<T>::type`` is rather more specialized than
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``pointee``, and is meant to be used to forward the result of
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dereferencing an object of its argument type. Most dereferenceable
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types just return a reference to their pointee, but some return
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proxy references or return the pointee by value. When that
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information is needed, call on ``indirect_reference``.
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Both of these templates are essential to the correct functioning of
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|indirect_iterator|_.
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.. |indirect_iterator| replace:: ``indirect_iterator``
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.. _indirect_iterator: indirect_iterator.html
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Reference
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=========
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``pointee``
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-----------
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.. include:: pointee_ref.rst
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``indirect_reference``
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----------------------
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.. include:: indirect_reference_ref.rst
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