deduction guides for std::stack
Defined in header <stack> | ||
template<class Container > stack( Container ) | (1) | (since C++17) |
template<class Container, class Alloc > stack( Container, Alloc ) | (2) | (since C++17) |
template<class InputIt > stack( InputIt, InputIt ) | (3) | (since C++23) |
template<class InputIt, class Alloc > stack( InputIt, InputIt, Alloc ) | (4) | (since C++23) |
template<ranges::input_range R > stack(std::from_range_t, R&&) | (5) | (since C++23) |
template<ranges::input_range R, class Allocator > stack(std::from_range_t, R&&, Allocator ) | (6) | (since C++23) |
These deduction guides are provided for stack
to allow deduction from underlying container type.
These overloads participate in overload resolution only if
InputIt
(if exists) satisfies LegacyInputIterator,Container
(if exists) does not satisfy Allocator,- for (3)(until C++23)(4)(since C++23),
Alloc
satisfies Allocator, and - std::uses_allocator_v<Container, Alloc> is true if both
Container
andAlloc
exist.
Note: the extent to which the library determines that a type does not satisfy LegacyInputIterator is unspecified, except that as a minimum integral types do not qualify as input iterators. Likewise, the extent to which it determines that a type does not satisfy Allocator is unspecified, except that as a minimum the member type Alloc::value_type
must exist and the expression std::declval<Alloc&>().allocate(std::size_t{}) must be well-formed when treated as an unevaluated operand.
[edit]Notes
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_adaptor_iterator_pair_constructor | 202106L | (C++23) | Iterator pair constructors for std::queue and std::stack; overloads (2) and (4) |
__cpp_lib_containers_ranges | 202202L | (C++23) | Ranges-aware construction and insertion; overloads (5) and (6) |
[edit]Example
#include <stack>#include <vector> int main(){std::vector<int> v ={1, 2, 3, 4};std::stack s{v};// guide #1 deduces std::stack<int, vector<int>>}