std::variant
The last part of this section deals with std::variant which allows us to create a variable from any of the types specified in the std::variant container.
std::variant is a type-safe union. An instance of std::variant
has a value from one of its types. The type must not be a reference, array or void
. A std::variant
can have a type more than once. A default-initialised std::variant
is initialised with its first type; therefore, its first type must have a default constructor. By using var.index
you get the zero-based index of the alternative held by the std::variant
var
. var.valueless_by_exception
returns false
if the variant holds a value. By using var.emplace
you can create a new value in-place. There are a few global functions used to access a std:variant
. The function template var.holds_alternative
lets you check if the std::variant
holds a specified alternative. You can use std::get
with an index and with a type as argument. By using an index, you will get the value. If you invoke std::get
with a type, you only will get the value if it is unique. If you use an invalid index or a non-unique type, you will get a std::bad_variant_access
exception. In contrast to std::get
which eventually returns an exception, std::get_if
returns a null pointer in the case of an error.
The following code snippet shows you the usage of a std::variant
.
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