deduction guides for std::multimap
Defined in header <map>
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template <class InputIt, class Comp = std::less<iter_key_t<InputIt>>, |
(1) | (since C++17) |
template<class Key, class T, |
(2) | (since C++17) |
template<class InputIt, class Alloc> multimap(InputIt, InputIt, Alloc) |
(3) | (since C++17) |
template<class Key, class T, class Allocator> multimap(std::initializer_list<std::pair<const Key, T>>, Allocator) |
(4) | (since C++17) |
where the type aliases iter_key_t, iter_val_t, iter_to_alloc_t are defined as if as follows
template<class InputIt> using iter_key_t = std::remove_const_t< |
(exposition only) | |
template<class InputIt> using iter_val_t = typename std::iterator_traits<InputIt>::value_type::second_type; |
(exposition only) | |
template<class InputIt> using iter_to_alloc_t = std::pair< |
(exposition only) | |
This deduction guide is provided for multimap to allow deduction from an iterator range (overloads (1,3)) and std::initializer_list (overloads (2,4)). These overloads only participate in overload resolution if InputIt
satisfies InputIterator, Alloc
satisfies Allocator, and Comp
does not satisfy Allocator.
Note: the extent to which the library determines that a type does not satisfy InputIterator is unspecified, except that as a minimum integral types do not qualify as input iterators. Likewise, the extent to which it determines that a type does not satisfy Allocator is unspecified, except that as a minimum the member type Alloc::value_type
must exist and the expression std::declval<Alloc&>().allocate(std::size_t{}) must be well-formed when treated as an unevaluated operand.
Example
#include <map> int main() { // std::multimap m1 = {{"foo", 1}, {"bar", 2}}; // Error: braced-init-list has no type; // cannot deduce pair<const Key, T> from // {"foo", 1} or {"bar", 2} std::multimap m1 = std::initializer_list< std::pair<char const* const, int>>({{"foo", 2}, {"bar", 3}}); // guide #2 std::multimap m2(m1.begin(), m1.end()); // guide #1 }