C++ named requirements: Swappable

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Any lvalue or rvalue of this type can be swapped with any lvalue or rvalue of some other type, using unqualified function call swap() in the context where both std::swap and the user-defined swap()s are visible.

Requirements

Type U is swappable with type T if, for any object u of type U and any object t of type T,

Expression Requirements Semantics
#include <algorithm> // until C++11

#include <utility> // since C++11
using std::swap;
swap(u, t);

After the call, the value of t is the value held by u before the call, and the value of u is the value held by t before the call. Calls the function named swap() found by overload resolution among all functions with that name that are found by argument-dependent lookup and the two std::swap templates defined in the header <algorithm> (until C++11)<utility> (since C++11).
#include <algorithm> // until C++11

#include <utility> // since C++11
using std::swap;
swap(t, u);

same same

Many standard library functions (for example, many algorithms) expect their arguments to satisfy Swappable, which means that any time the standard library performs a swap, it uses the equivalent of using std::swap; swap(t, u);.

Typical implementations either

1) Define a non-member swap in the enclosing namespace, which may forward to a member swap if access to non-public data members is required.
2) Define a friend function in-class (this approach hides the class-specific swap from name lookup other than ADL).

Notes

It is unspecified whether <algorithm> (until C++11)<utility> (since C++11) is actually included when the standard library functions perform the swap, so the user-provided swap() should not expect it to be included.

Example

#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
 
struct IntVector
{
    std::vector<int> v;
    IntVector& operator=(IntVector) = delete; // not assignable
    void swap(IntVector& other)
    {
        v.swap(other.v);
    }
    void operator()(auto rem, char term = ' ')
    {
        for (std::cout << rem << " { "; int e : v)
            std::cout << e << ' ';
        std::cout << "}" << term;
    }
};
 
void swap(IntVector& v1, IntVector& v2)
{
    v1.swap(v2);
}
 
int main()
{
    IntVector v1{ {1,1,1,1,1} }, v2{ {2222,2222} };
    auto prn = [&]{ v1("v1"), v2("v2", '\n'); };
 
//  std::swap(v1, v2); // compiler error! std::swap requires MoveAssignable
    prn();
    std::iter_swap(&v1, &v2); // OK: library calls unqualified swap()
    prn();
    std::ranges::swap(v1, v2); // OK: library calls unqualified swap()
    prn();
}

Output:

v1 { 1 1 1 1 1 } v2 { 2222 2222 }
v1 { 2222 2222 } v2 { 1 1 1 1 1 }
v1 { 1 1 1 1 1 } v2 { 2222 2222 }

Defect reports

The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.

DR Applied to Behavior as published Correct behavior
LWG 226 C++98 it was unclear how the standard library uses swap clarified to use both std:: and ADL-found swap

See also

checks if objects of a type can be swapped with objects of same or different type
(class template)
specifies that a type can be swapped or that two types can be swapped with each other
(concept)