1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124
|
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<header name="boost/variant/variant_fwd.hpp">
<using-namespace name="boost"/>
<para>Provides forward declarations of the
<code><classname>boost::variant</classname></code>,
<code><classname>boost::make_variant_over</classname></code>,
<code><classname>boost::make_recursive_variant</classname></code>, and
<code><classname>boost::make_recursive_variant_over</classname></code>
class templates and the <code>boost::recursive_variant_</code> tag type.
Also defines several preprocessor symbols, as described below.</para>
<macro name="BOOST_VARIANT_LIMIT_TYPES">
<purpose>
<simpara>Expands to the length of the
template parameter list for
<code><classname>variant</classname></code>.</simpara>
</purpose>
<description>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Note</emphasis>: Conforming
implementations of <code>variant</code> must allow at least ten
template arguments. That is, BOOST_VARIANT_LIMIT_TYPES must be greater
or equal to <code>10</code>.</para>
</description>
</macro>
<macro name="BOOST_VARIANT_ENUM_PARAMS" kind="functionlike">
<macro-parameter name="param"/>
<purpose>
<simpara>Enumerate parameters for use with
<code><classname>variant</classname></code>.</simpara>
</purpose>
<description>
<para>Expands to a comma-separated sequence of length
<code><macroname>BOOST_VARIANT_LIMIT_TYPES</macroname></code>, where
each element in the sequence consists of the concatenation of
<emphasis>param</emphasis> with its zero-based index into the
sequence. That is,
<code>param ## 0, param ## 1, ..., param ## BOOST_VARIANT_LIMIT_TYPES - 1</code>.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Rationale</emphasis>: This macro greatly
simplifies for the user the process of declaring
<code><classname>variant</classname></code> types
in function templates or explicit partial specializations of class
templates, as shown in the
<link linkend="variant.tutorial.preprocessor">tutorial</link>.</para>
</description>
</macro>
<macro name="BOOST_VARIANT_ENUM_SHIFTED_PARAMS" kind="functionlike">
<macro-parameter name="param"/>
<purpose>
<simpara>Enumerate all but the first parameter for use with
<code><classname>variant</classname></code>.</simpara>
</purpose>
<description>
<para>Expands to a comma-separated sequence of length
<code><macroname>BOOST_VARIANT_LIMIT_TYPES</macroname> - 1</code>,
where each element in the sequence consists of the concatenation of
<emphasis>param</emphasis> with its one-based index into the sequence.
That is,
<code>param ## 1, ..., param ## BOOST_VARIANT_LIMIT_TYPES - 1</code>.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Note</emphasis>: This macro results in the
same expansion as
<code><macroname>BOOST_VARIANT_ENUM_PARAMS</macroname></code> -- but
without the first term.</para>
</description>
</macro>
<macro name="BOOST_VARIANT_NO_REFERENCE_SUPPORT">
<purpose>
<simpara>Indicates <code><classname>variant</classname></code> does not
support references as bounded types.</simpara>
</purpose>
<description>
<para>Defined only if <code><classname>variant</classname></code> does
not support references as bounded types.</para>
</description>
</macro>
<macro name="BOOST_VARIANT_NO_TYPE_SEQUENCE_SUPPORT">
<purpose>
<simpara>Indicates absence of support for specifying the bounded types
of a <code><classname>variant</classname></code> by the elements of a
type sequence.</simpara>
</purpose>
<description>
<para>Defined only if
<code><classname>make_variant_over</classname></code> and
<code><classname>make_recursive_variant_over</classname></code>
are not supported for some reason on the target compiler.</para>
</description>
</macro>
<macro name="BOOST_VARIANT_NO_FULL_RECURSIVE_VARIANT_SUPPORT">
<purpose>
<simpara>Indicates
<code><classname>make_recursive_variant</classname></code> operates in
an implementation-defined manner.</simpara>
</purpose>
<description>
<para>Defined only if
<code><classname>make_recursive_variant</classname></code> does not
operate as documented on the target compiler, but rather in an
implementation-defined manner.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Implementation Note</emphasis>: If
<code>BOOST_VARIANT_NO_FULL_RECURSIVE_VARIANT_SUPPORT</code> is
defined for the target compiler, the current implementation uses the
<libraryname>MPL</libraryname> lambda mechanism to approximate the
desired behavior. (In most cases, however, such compilers do not have
full lambda support either.)</para>
</description>
</macro>
</header>
|