std::uses_allocator<std::tuple>

From cppreference.com
< cpplrm; | utilitylrm; | tuple
Defined in header <tuple>
template< class... Types, class Alloc >
struct uses_allocator< std::tuple<Types...>, Alloc > : std::true_type { };
(since C++11)

This specialization of std::uses_allocator informs other library components that tuples support uses-allocator construction, even though they do not have a nested allocator_type.

Inherited from std::integral_constant

Member constants

value
[static]
true
(public static member constant)

Member functions

operator bool
converts the object to bool, returns value
(public member function)
operator()
(C++14)
returns value
(public member function)

Member types

Type Definition
value_type bool
type std::integral_constant<bool, value>

Example

// myalloc is a stateful Allocator with a single-argument constructor
// that takes an int. It has no default constructor.

    typedef std::vector<int, myalloc<int>> innervector_t;
    typedef std::tuple<int, innervector_t> elem_t;
    typedef std::scoped_allocator_adaptor< myalloc<elem_t>, myalloc<int>> Alloc;
    Alloc a(1,2);
    std::vector<elem_t, Alloc> v(a);
    v.resize(1);                  // uses allocator #1 for elements of v
    std::get<1>(v[0]).resize(10); // uses allocator #2 for innervector_t


See also

checks if the specified type supports uses-allocator construction
(class template)