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std::error_condition

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | error
 
 
 
 
 
Defined in header <system_error>
class error_condition;
(since C++11)

std::error_condition holds a platform-independent value identifying an error condition. Like std::error_code, it is uniquely identified by an integer value and a std::error_category, but unlike std::error_code, the value is not platform-dependent.

A typical implementation holds one integer data member (the value) and a pointer to an std::error_category.

Contents

[edit]Member functions

constructs an error_condition
(public member function)[edit]
replaces the contents
(public member function)[edit]
replaces the contents
(public member function)[edit]
sets the error_condition to value 0 in generic_category
(public member function)[edit]
obtains the value of the error_condition
(public member function)[edit]
obtains the error_category for this error_condition
(public member function)[edit]
obtains the explanatory string
(public member function)[edit]
checks if the value is non-zero
(public member function)[edit]

[edit]Non-member functions

(removed in C++20)(removed in C++20)(C++20)
compares error_conditions and error_codes
(function)[edit]

[edit]Helper classes

identifies an enumeration as an std::error_condition
(class template)[edit]
hash support for std::error_condition
(class template specialization)[edit]

[edit]Notes

The comparison between a std::error_code and a std::error_condition is defined by their error categories. Notably, an error condition of std::generic_category may compare equal to an error code of a specific category (e.g. std::system_category), if they represent the same kind of error.

A std::errc value can be compared to an error code via implicit conversion to std::error_condition.

#include <cerrno>#include <iostream>#include <system_error>#include <Windows.h>   int main(){std::error_code ec{ERROR_FILE_EXISTS, std::system_category()}; std::error_condition econd{EEXIST, std::generic_category()};   std::cout.setf(std::ios::boolalpha);std::cout<<(ec == econd)<<'\n';// typically truestd::cout<<(ec ==std::errc::file_exists)<<'\n';// dittostd::cout<<(ec == make_error_code(std::errc::file_exists))<<'\n';// false:// different category}

Possible output:

true true false

[edit]See also

(C++11)
holds a platform-dependent error code
(class)[edit]
base class for error categories
(class)[edit]
creates an error condition for an errc value e
(function)[edit]
close