...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
template <class T>
struct has_trivial_assign : public true_type-or-false_type
{};
Inherits: If T is a (possibly cv-qualified) type with a trivial assignment-operator then inherits from true_type, otherwise inherits from false_type.
If a type has a trivial assignment-operator then the operator has the same
effect as copying the bits of one object to the other: calls to the operator
can be safely replaced with a call to memcpy
.
Compiler Compatibility: Without some (as
yet unspecified) help from the compiler, has_trivial_assign will never report
that a user-defined class or struct has a trivial constructor; this is always
safe, if possibly sub-optimal. In order to correctly handle deleted or private
assignment operators, the compiler must also support C++11's decltype
. Currently (May 2015) compilers more
recent than Visual C++ 8, GCC-4.3, Greenhills 6.0, Intel-11.0, and Codegear
have the necessary compiler intrinsics
to ensure that this trait "just works". You may also test to see
if the necessary intrinsics
are available by checking to see if the macro BOOST_HAS_TRIVIAL_ASSIGN
is defined.
C++ Standard Reference: 12.8p11.
Header: #include
<boost/type_traits/has_trivial_assign.hpp>
or #include <boost/type_traits.hpp>
Examples:
has_trivial_assign<int>
inherits fromtrue_type
.
has_trivial_assign<char*>::type
is the typetrue_type
.
has_trivial_assign<int (*)(long)>::value
is an integral constant expression that evaluates to true.
has_trivial_assign<MyClass>::value
is an integral constant expression that evaluates to false.
has_trivial_assign<T>::value_type
is the typebool
.