Document number: P0077R0
Supersedes: N4446
Date: 2015-09-22
Project: Programming Language C++, Library Evolution Working Group
Reply-to: Agustín Bergé agustinberge@gmail.com
is_callable, the missing INVOKE related trait
0. History
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Add discussion on alternative syntax.
-
Add discussion on additional nothrow trait, add
is_nothrow_callable. -
Add feature-testing macro recomendation.
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Remove discussion on naming.
1. Introduction
This paper proposes to introduce a new trait to determine whether an
INVOKE expression is well formed.
2. Motivation
Starting with C++11, the library introduced the pseudo-macro INVOKE as a
way to uniformly handle function objects and member pointers as call
expressions. The trait result_of was made to follow INVOKE semantics
as well. This left users —who want to follow the precedence set forth by
the standard library— with the correct result type but no direct way of
obtaining such result, and invoke implementations proliferated.
This was recently rectified by the introduction of invoke to the working
draft [N4169]. However, there is still one piece of the puzzle missing, and is
the ability to query whether an INVOKE expression is well formed when
treated as an unevaluated operand. Such functionality is currently present in
the form of C++14 SFINAE-friendly result_of, albeit in a non user-friendly
way, and it should be made readily available in trait form for the same
reasons invoke was introduced into the library.
The following is an artist depiction of such trait:
template <class T, class R = void, class = void>struct is_callable : false_type{};template <class T>struct is_callable<T, void, void_t<result_of_t<T>>> : true_type{};template <class T, class R>struct is_callable<T, R, void_t<result_of_t<T>>> : is_convertible<result_of_t<T>, R>{}; |
This trait is implemented in the wild under different names, and the check for a compatible result type is not always present. This post [call-me-maybe] shows how the implementation of such trait has been both improved and simplified by every new standard.
3. Design questions
3.1 Compatible return types
INVOKE comes in two flavors, the primary INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ..., tN)
and INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ..., tN, R) defined as INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ..., tN)
implicitly converted to R. After the resolution of LWG2420,
INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ...,
tN, void)
is defined as static_cast<void>(INVOKE(f, t1, t2, ..., tN)). Both
flavors can be supported with a defaulted template argument:
template <class, class R = void> struct is_callable; // not definedtemplate <class Fn, class... ArgTypes, class R> struct is_callable<Fn(ArgTypes...), R>; |
However, if only one of those flavors would be supported there would be no missing functionality, only more work for the user.
3.2 Alternative parameter syntax
Someone suggests alternative parameter syntax,
is_callable<Fn, R(Args...)>.Do we want AB to add consideration of the alternative syntax in the paper?
SF F N A SA 0 6 5 0 0 But consistency between this and invocation_traits (in Fundamentals v1) is important.
The syntax used by the invocation traits in the Library Fundamentals TS is
Fn(Args...), which is consistent with the syntax used by std::result_of.
The optional trailing R for a checked compatible return type is consistent
with the alternative flavor of INVOKE.
template <class Fn, class... ArgTypes>struct invocation_type<Fn(ArgTypes...)>;template <class Fn, class... ArgTypes>struct result_of<Fn(ArgTypes...)>; |
For consistency with the rest of the standard library, the suggested syntax is
Fn(ArgTypes...) for representing an instance of a callable Fn invoked with
arguments of type ArgTypes....
3.3 Additional nothrow trait
Add
is_noexcept_callable?
SF F N A SA 1 4 4 2 0
Traits that check whether certain expressions involving special member
functions are well-formed also ship an additional nothrow trait, that
reports the result of applying the noexcept operator to the expression. It
is reasonable to provide a similar additional nothrow trait for
is_callable, is_nothrow_callable, that reports whether the given
INVOKE expression is known not to throw any exceptions.
It should be noted that the standard library does not specify an exception
specification for its callable types (like reference_wrapper), but a
conforming implementation may add a non-throwing noexcept-specification.
The result of is_nothrow_callable when a standard library callable type is
involved is thus implementation defined.
4. Feature-testing
For the purposes of SG10, we recommend a feature-testing macro named
__cpp_lib_experimental_is_callable.
5. Proposed Wording
This wording is relative to [N4527].
Change 20.10.2 [meta.type.synop], header <type_traits> synopsis, as
indicated
namespacestd {[...]// 20.10.4.3, type properties:[...]template<classT>structis_nothrow_destructible;template<classT>structhas_virtual_destructor;template<class,classR =void>structis_callable;// not definedtemplate<classFn,class... ArgTypes,classR>structis_callable<Fn(ArgTypes...), R>;template<class,classR =void>structis_nothrow_callable;// not definedtemplate<classFn,class... ArgTypes,classR>structis_nothrow_callable<Fn(ArgTypes...), R>;[...]}
Change 20.10.4.3 [meta.unary.prop], Table 49 — Type property predicates, add new rows with the following content:
Template:
template<classFn,class... ArgTypes,classR>structis_callable<Fn(ArgTypes...), R>;
Condition:
The expression
INVOKE(declval<Fn>(), declval<ArgTypes>()..., R)is well formed when treated as an unevaluated operand.
Preconditions:
Fnand all types in the parameter packArgTypesshall be complete types, (possibly cv-qualified)void, or arrays of unknown bound.
Template:
template<classFn,class... ArgTypes,classR>structis_nothrow_callable<Fn(ArgTypes...), R>;
Condition:
is_callable<Fn(ArgTypes...), R>::valueistrueand the expressionINVOKE(declval<Fn>(), declval<ArgTypes>()..., R)is known not to throw any exception.
Preconditions:
Fnand all types in the parameter packArgTypesshall be complete types, (possibly cv-qualified)void, or arrays of unknown bound.
6. References
-
[N4527] ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG21, Programming Languages - C++, working draft, May 2015
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2015/n4527.pdf -
[call-me-maybe] True Story: Call Me Maybe - Tales of C++
http://talesofcpp.fusionfenix.com/post-11/true-story-call-me-maybe -
[N4169] A proposal to add invoke function template (Revision 1) - Tomasz Kaminski
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2014/n4169.html