...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
An owning, read-only sequence of fields.
Defined in header <boost/mysql/row.hpp>
class row
Name |
Description |
---|---|
A random access iterator to an element. |
|
The reference type. |
|
A signed integer type used to represent differences. |
|
A random access iterator to an element. |
|
The reference type. |
|
An unsigned integer type to represent sizes. |
|
A type that can hold elements in this collection with value semantics. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Converts the row into a |
|
Returns the i-th element in the row or throws an exception. |
|
Returns the last element in the row. |
|
Returns an iterator to the first field in the row. |
|
Returns true if there are no fields in the row (i.e. |
|
Returns an iterator to one-past-the-last field in the row. |
|
Returns the first element in the row. |
|
Copy assignment. |
|
Returns the i-th element in the row (unchecked access). |
|
Creates a |
|
row [constructor] |
Constructs an empty row. |
Returns the number of fields in the row. |
|
~row [destructor] |
Destructor. |
Name |
Description |
---|---|
Equality operator. |
|
Inequality operator. |
Although owning, row
is read-only.
It's optimized for memory re-use. If you need to mutate fields, use a std::vector<field>
instead (see row_view::as_vector
and row::as_vector
).
A row
object owns a chunk
of memory in which it stores its elements. On element access (using iterators,
row::at
or row::operator[]
) it returns field_view
's pointing into the
row
's internal storage. These
views behave like references, and are valid as long as pointers, iterators
and references into the row
remain valid.