Defined in header <stdexcept> | ||
---|---|---|
class domain_error; |
Defines a type of object to be thrown as exception. It may be used by the implementation to report domain errors, that is, situations where the inputs are outside of the domain on which an operation is defined.
The standard library components do not throw this exception (mathematical functions report domain errors as specified in math_errhandling
). Third-party libraries, however, use this. For example, boost.math throws std::domain_error
if boost::math::policies::throw_on_error
is enabled (the default setting).
Inheritance diagram.
(constructor) | constructs a new domain_error object with the given message (public member function) |
operator= | replaces the domain_error object (public member function) |
domain_error( const std::string& what_arg ); | (1) | |
domain_error( const char* what_arg ); | (2) | |
(3) | ||
domain_error( const domain_error& other ); | (until C++11) | |
domain_error( const domain_error& other ) noexcept; | (since C++11) |
what_arg
as explanatory string. After construction, std::strcmp(what(), what_arg.c_str()) == 0
.what_arg
as explanatory string. After construction, std::strcmp(what(), what_arg) == 0
.*this
and other
both have dynamic type std::domain_error
then std::strcmp(what(), other.what()) == 0
. No exception can be thrown from the copy constructor. (until C++11)
what_arg | - | explanatory string |
other | - | another exception object to copy |
std::bad_alloc
Because copying std::domain_error
is not permitted to throw exceptions, this message is typically stored internally as a separately-allocated reference-counted string. This is also why there is no constructor taking std::string&&
: it would have to copy the content anyway.
Before the resolution of LWG issue 254, the non-copy constructor can only accept std::string
. It makes dynamic allocation mandatory in order to construct a std::string
object.
After the resolution of LWG issue 471, a derived standard exception class must have a publicly accessible copy constructor. It can be implicitly defined as long as the explanatory strings obtained by what()
are the same for the original object and the copied object.
domain_error& operator=( const domain_error& other ); | (until C++11) | |
domain_error& operator=( const domain_error& other ) noexcept; | (since C++11) |
Assigns the contents with those of other
. If *this
and other
both have dynamic type std::domain_error
then std::strcmp(what(), other.what()) == 0
after assignment. No exception can be thrown from the copy assignment operator. (until C++11).
other | - | another exception object to assign with |
*this
.
After the resolution of LWG issue 471, a derived standard exception class must have a publicly accessible copy assignment operator. It can be implicitly defined as long as the explanatory strings obtained by what()
are the same for the original object and the copied object.
[virtual] | destroys the exception object (virtual public member function of std::exception ) |
[virtual] | returns an explanatory string (virtual public member function of std::exception ) |
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 254 | C++98 | the constructor accepting const char* was missing | added |
LWG 471 | C++98 | the explanatory strings of std::domain_error 'scopies were implementation-defined | they are the same as that of the original std::domain_error object |
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