std::mem_fun_ref
Defined in header <functional> | ||
template<class Res, class T > std::mem_fun_ref_t<Res,T> mem_fun_ref( Res (T::*f)()); | (1) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
template<class Res, class T > std::const_mem_fun_ref_t<Res,T> mem_fun_ref( Res (T::*f)()const); | (1) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
template<class Res, class T, class Arg > std::mem_fun1_ref_t<Res,T,Arg> mem_fun_ref( Res (T::*f)(Arg)); | (2) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
template<class Res, class T, class Arg > std::const_mem_fun1_ref_t<Res,T,Arg> mem_fun_ref( Res (T::*f)(Arg)const); | (2) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
Creates a member function wrapper object, deducing the target type from the template arguments. The wrapper object expects a reference to an object of type T
as the first parameter to its operator().
This function and the related types were deprecated in C++11 and removed in C++17 in favor of the more general std::mem_fn and std::bind, both of which create callable adaptor-compatible function objects from member functions.
Contents |
[edit]Parameters
f | - | pointer to a member function to create a wrapper for |
[edit]Return value
A function object wrapping f.
[edit]Exceptions
May throw implementation-defined exceptions.
[edit]Notes
The difference between std::mem_fun and std::mem_fun_ref is that the former produces a function wrapper that expects a pointer to an object, whereas the latter — a reference.
[edit]Example
Uses std::mem_fun_ref
to bind std::string's member function size().
#include <algorithm>#include <functional>#include <iostream>#include <iterator>#include <string>#include <vector> int main(){std::vector<std::string> v ={"once", "upon", "a", "time"};std::transform(v.cbegin(), v.cend(), std::ostream_iterator<std::size_t>(std::cout, " "), std::mem_fun_ref(&std::string::size));}
Output:
4 4 1 4
[edit]See also
(deprecated in C++11)(removed in C++17) | creates a wrapper from a pointer to member function, callable with a pointer to object (function template) |