Defined in header <functional> | ||
---|---|---|
struct less; | (since C++20) |
Function object for performing comparisons. Deduces the parameter types of the function call operator from the arguments (but not the return type).
The function call operator yields the implementation-defined strict total order over pointers if the <
operator between arguments invokes a built-in comparison operator for a pointer, even if the built-in <
operator does not.
The implementation-defined strict total order is consistent with the partial order imposed by built-in comparison operators (<=>
, <
, >
, <=
, and >=
), and consistent among following standard function objects:
std::less
, std::greater
, std::less_equal
, and std::greater_equal
, when the template argument is a pointer type or void
std::ranges::equal_to
, std::ranges::not_equal_to
, std::ranges::less
, std::ranges::greater
, std::ranges::less_equal
, std::ranges::greater_equal
, and std::compare_three_way
Member type | Definition |
---|---|
is_transparent | /* unspecified */ |
operator() | checks if the first argument is less than the second (public member function) |
template< class T, class U > requires std::totally_ordered_with<T, U> // with different semantic requirements constexpr bool operator()(T&& t, U&& u) const; |
Compares t
and u
, equivalent to return std::forward<T>(t) < std::forward<U>(u);
, except when that expression resolves to a call to a built-in operator<
comparing pointers.
When a call would not invoke a built-in operator comparing pointers, the behavior is undefined if std::totally_ordered_with<T, U>
is not modeled.
When a call would invoke a built-in operator comparing pointers of type P
, the result is instead determined as follows:
true
if the (possibly converted) value of the first argument precedes the (possibly converted) value of the second argument in the implementation-defined strict total ordering over all pointer values of type P
. This strict total ordering is consistent with the partial order imposed by the built-in operators <
, >
, <=
, and >=
. false
. The behavior is undefined unless the conversion sequences from both T
and U
to P
are equality-preserving.
Expressions declared in requires-expressions of the standard library concepts are required to be equality-preserving (except where stated otherwise).
Unlike std::less
, std::ranges::less
requires all six comparison operators <
, <=
, >
, >=
, ==
and !=
to be valid (via the totally_ordered_with
constraint).
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 3530 | C++20 | syntactic checks were relaxed while comparing pointers | only semantic requirements relaxed |
function object implementing x < y (class template) |
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