The type must work with == operator and the result should have standard semantics.
The type T
satisfies EqualityComparable if.
Given.
a
, b
and c
, expressions of type T
or (since C++11) const T
The following expressions must be valid and have their specified effects:
Expression | Return type | Requirements |
---|---|---|
a == b | implicitly convertible to bool | Establishes an equivalence relation, that is, it satisfies the following properties:
|
To satisfy this requirement, types that do not have built-in comparison operators have to provide a user-defined operator==.
For the types that are both EqualityComparable and LessThanComparable, the C++ standard library makes a distinction between equality, which is the value of the expression a == b
and equivalence, which is the value of the expression !(a < b) && !(b < a)
.
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 283 | C++98 | even if T is EqualityComparable, the requirements did not apply to const T objects | they apply to const T instead of T |
(C++20) | specifies that operator == is an equivalence relation (concept) |
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