02451914b9
-- 74c1330e29f1501f2738258faf9ec4564395c90a by Gennadiy Civil <misterg@google.com>: Merging https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/pull/166 PiperOrigin-RevId: 212487256 -- 4ac236574ff8fb3cc1125505292b0bd8c8192da9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Allow c_move to take rvalue containers. PiperOrigin-RevId: 212458618 -- ce94e23984870db666d4c91623ae45b3c60b5b61 by Matt Armstrong <marmstrong@google.com>: Internal change. PiperOrigin-RevId: 212153041 -- 7d88d286821c5839934756dd63a704ed162c49cb by Chris Kennelly <ckennelly@google.com>: Internal change PiperOrigin-RevId: 211982309 -- ddae814b3f609948c20551ea3d80bf51b973f480 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Remove unused argument from InlinedVector's AllocatorAndTag This is not part of InlinedVector's public interface. PiperOrigin-RevId: 211973017 -- 051fbfd81648a8da66c62c6603af63038d709c15 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Minor performance fix PiperOrigin-RevId: 211820453 -- c205cb2add7400bc8caf2131cb700eea560b7dbf by Laramie Leavitt <lar@google.com>: Make absl::Span a tiny bit more consistent. Add constexper to equivalent absl::Span members as described by http://open-std.org/JTC1/SC22/WG21/docs/papers/2018/p0122r7.pdf * Span constructor use consistently delegate to Span(ptr, length) * Mark more member methods as constexpr. * Use data() and size() consistently in member methods. PiperOrigin-RevId: 211707244 -- 55500c9e941f2f58f4a95c121f32772408866eee by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Stop catching polymorphic exception types by value. GCC 8 emits a warning for this. PiperOrigin-RevId: 211684466 GitOrigin-RevId: 74c1330e29f1501f2738258faf9ec4564395c90a Change-Id: Iceab4a5b30ee35d82ef494830262ad29c028cb0a
755 lines
26 KiB
C++
755 lines
26 KiB
C++
//
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// Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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// You may obtain a copy of the License at
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//
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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//
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// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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// limitations under the License.
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//
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// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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// span.h
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// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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//
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// This header file defines a `Span<T>` type for holding a view of an existing
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// array of data. The `Span` object, much like the `absl::string_view` object,
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// does not own such data itself. A span provides a lightweight way to pass
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// around view of such data.
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//
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// Additionally, this header file defines `MakeSpan()` and `MakeConstSpan()`
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// factory functions, for clearly creating spans of type `Span<T>` or read-only
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// `Span<const T>` when such types may be difficult to identify due to issues
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// with implicit conversion.
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//
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// The C++ standards committee currently has a proposal for a `std::span` type,
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// (http://wg21.link/p0122), which is not yet part of the standard (though may
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// become part of C++20). As of August 2017, the differences between
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// `absl::Span` and this proposal are:
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// * `absl::Span` uses `size_t` for `size_type`
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// * `absl::Span` has no `operator()`
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// * `absl::Span` has no constructors for `std::unique_ptr` or
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// `std::shared_ptr`
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// * `absl::Span` has the factory functions `MakeSpan()` and
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// `MakeConstSpan()`
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// * `absl::Span` has `front()` and `back()` methods
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// * bounds-checked access to `absl::Span` is accomplished with `at()`
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// * `absl::Span` has compiler-provided move and copy constructors and
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// assignment. This is due to them being specified as `constexpr`, but that
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// implies const in C++11.
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// * `absl::Span` has no `element_type` or `index_type` typedefs
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// * A read-only `absl::Span<const T>` can be implicitly constructed from an
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// initializer list.
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// * `absl::Span` has no `bytes()`, `size_bytes()`, `as_bytes()`, or
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// `as_mutable_bytes()` methods
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// * `absl::Span` has no static extent template parameter, nor constructors
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// which exist only because of the static extent parameter.
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// * `absl::Span` has an explicit mutable-reference constructor
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//
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// For more information, see the class comments below.
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#ifndef ABSL_TYPES_SPAN_H_
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#define ABSL_TYPES_SPAN_H_
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#include <algorithm>
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#include <cassert>
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#include <cstddef>
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#include <initializer_list>
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#include <iterator>
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#include <string>
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#include <type_traits>
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#include <utility>
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#include "absl/algorithm/algorithm.h"
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#include "absl/base/internal/throw_delegate.h"
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#include "absl/base/macros.h"
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#include "absl/base/optimization.h"
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#include "absl/base/port.h"
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#include "absl/meta/type_traits.h"
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namespace absl {
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template <typename T>
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class Span;
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namespace span_internal {
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// A constexpr min function
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constexpr size_t Min(size_t a, size_t b) noexcept { return a < b ? a : b; }
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// Wrappers for access to container data pointers.
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template <typename C>
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constexpr auto GetDataImpl(C& c, char) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/references)
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-> decltype(c.data()) {
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return c.data();
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}
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// Before C++17, string::data returns a const char* in all cases.
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inline char* GetDataImpl(std::string& s, // NOLINT(runtime/references)
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int) noexcept {
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return &s[0];
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}
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template <typename C>
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constexpr auto GetData(C& c) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/references)
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-> decltype(GetDataImpl(c, 0)) {
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return GetDataImpl(c, 0);
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}
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// Detection idioms for size() and data().
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template <typename C>
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using HasSize =
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std::is_integral<absl::decay_t<decltype(std::declval<C&>().size())>>;
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// We want to enable conversion from vector<T*> to Span<const T* const> but
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// disable conversion from vector<Derived> to Span<Base>. Here we use
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// the fact that U** is convertible to Q* const* if and only if Q is the same
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// type or a more cv-qualified version of U. We also decay the result type of
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// data() to avoid problems with classes which have a member function data()
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// which returns a reference.
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template <typename T, typename C>
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using HasData =
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std::is_convertible<absl::decay_t<decltype(GetData(std::declval<C&>()))>*,
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T* const*>;
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// Extracts value type from a Container
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template <typename C>
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struct ElementType {
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using type = typename absl::remove_reference_t<C>::value_type;
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};
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template <typename T, size_t N>
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struct ElementType<T (&)[N]> {
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using type = T;
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};
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template <typename C>
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using ElementT = typename ElementType<C>::type;
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template <typename T>
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using EnableIfMutable =
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typename std::enable_if<!std::is_const<T>::value, int>::type;
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template <typename T>
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bool EqualImpl(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
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static_assert(std::is_const<T>::value, "");
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return absl::equal(a.begin(), a.end(), b.begin(), b.end());
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}
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template <typename T>
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bool LessThanImpl(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
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static_assert(std::is_const<T>::value, "");
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return std::lexicographical_compare(a.begin(), a.end(), b.begin(), b.end());
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}
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// The `IsConvertible` classes here are needed because of the
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// `std::is_convertible` bug in libcxx when compiled with GCC. This build
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// configuration is used by Android NDK toolchain. Reference link:
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// https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27538.
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template <typename From, typename To>
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struct IsConvertibleHelper {
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private:
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static std::true_type testval(To);
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static std::false_type testval(...);
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public:
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using type = decltype(testval(std::declval<From>()));
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};
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template <typename From, typename To>
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struct IsConvertible : IsConvertibleHelper<From, To>::type {};
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// TODO(zhangxy): replace `IsConvertible` with `std::is_convertible` once the
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// older version of libcxx is not supported.
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template <typename From, typename To>
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using EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst =
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typename std::enable_if<IsConvertible<From, Span<const To>>::value>::type;
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} // namespace span_internal
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//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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// Span
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//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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//
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// A `Span` is an "array view" type for holding a view of a contiguous data
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// array; the `Span` object does not and cannot own such data itself. A span
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// provides an easy way to provide overloads for anything operating on
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// contiguous sequences without needing to manage pointers and array lengths
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// manually.
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// A span is conceptually a pointer (ptr) and a length (size) into an already
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// existing array of contiguous memory; the array it represents references the
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// elements "ptr[0] .. ptr[size-1]". Passing a properly-constructed `Span`
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// instead of raw pointers avoids many issues related to index out of bounds
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// errors.
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//
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// Spans may also be constructed from containers holding contiguous sequences.
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// Such containers must supply `data()` and `size() const` methods (e.g
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// `std::vector<T>`, `absl::InlinedVector<T, N>`). All implicit conversions to
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// `absl::Span` from such containers will create spans of type `const T`;
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// spans which can mutate their values (of type `T`) must use explicit
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// constructors.
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//
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// A `Span<T>` is somewhat analogous to an `absl::string_view`, but for an array
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// of elements of type `T`. A user of `Span` must ensure that the data being
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// pointed to outlives the `Span` itself.
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//
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// You can construct a `Span<T>` in several ways:
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//
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// * Explicitly from a reference to a container type
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// * Explicitly from a pointer and size
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// * Implicitly from a container type (but only for spans of type `const T`)
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// * Using the `MakeSpan()` or `MakeConstSpan()` factory functions.
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//
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// Examples:
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//
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// // Construct a Span explicitly from a container:
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// std::vector<int> v = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
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// auto span = absl::Span<const int>(v);
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//
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// // Construct a Span explicitly from a C-style array:
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// int a[5] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
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// auto span = absl::Span<const int>(a);
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//
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// // Construct a Span implicitly from a container
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// void MyRoutine(absl::Span<const int> a) {
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// ...
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// }
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// std::vector v = {1,2,3,4,5};
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// MyRoutine(v) // convert to Span<const T>
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//
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// Note that `Span` objects, in addition to requiring that the memory they
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// point to remains alive, must also ensure that such memory does not get
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// reallocated. Therefore, to avoid undefined behavior, containers with
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// associated span views should not invoke operations that may reallocate memory
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// (such as resizing) or invalidate iterators into the container.
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//
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// One common use for a `Span` is when passing arguments to a routine that can
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// accept a variety of array types (e.g. a `std::vector`, `absl::InlinedVector`,
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// a C-style array, etc.). Instead of creating overloads for each case, you
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// can simply specify a `Span` as the argument to such a routine.
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//
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// Example:
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//
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// void MyRoutine(absl::Span<const int> a) {
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// ...
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// }
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//
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// std::vector v = {1,2,3,4,5};
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// MyRoutine(v);
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//
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// absl::InlinedVector<int, 4> my_inline_vector;
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// MyRoutine(my_inline_vector);
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//
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// // Explicit constructor from pointer,size
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// int* my_array = new int[10];
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// MyRoutine(absl::Span<const int>(my_array, 10));
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template <typename T>
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class Span {
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private:
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// Used to determine whether a Span can be constructed from a container of
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// type C.
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template <typename C>
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using EnableIfConvertibleFrom =
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typename std::enable_if<span_internal::HasData<T, C>::value &&
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span_internal::HasSize<C>::value>::type;
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// Used to SFINAE-enable a function when the slice elements are const.
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template <typename U>
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using EnableIfConstView =
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typename std::enable_if<std::is_const<T>::value, U>::type;
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// Used to SFINAE-enable a function when the slice elements are mutable.
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template <typename U>
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using EnableIfMutableView =
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typename std::enable_if<!std::is_const<T>::value, U>::type;
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public:
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using value_type = absl::remove_cv_t<T>;
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using pointer = T*;
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using const_pointer = const T*;
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using reference = T&;
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using const_reference = const T&;
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using iterator = pointer;
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using const_iterator = const_pointer;
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using reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<iterator>;
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using const_reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator>;
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using size_type = size_t;
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using difference_type = ptrdiff_t;
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static const size_type npos = ~(size_type(0));
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constexpr Span() noexcept : Span(nullptr, 0) {}
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constexpr Span(pointer array, size_type length) noexcept
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: ptr_(array), len_(length) {}
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// Implicit conversion constructors
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template <size_t N>
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constexpr Span(T (&a)[N]) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
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: Span(a, N) {}
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// Explicit reference constructor for a mutable `Span<T>` type. Can be
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// replaced with MakeSpan() to infer the type parameter.
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template <typename V, typename = EnableIfConvertibleFrom<V>,
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typename = EnableIfMutableView<V>>
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explicit Span(V& v) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/references)
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: Span(span_internal::GetData(v), v.size()) {}
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// Implicit reference constructor for a read-only `Span<const T>` type
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template <typename V, typename = EnableIfConvertibleFrom<V>,
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typename = EnableIfConstView<V>>
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constexpr Span(const V& v) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
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: Span(span_internal::GetData(v), v.size()) {}
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// Implicit constructor from an initializer list, making it possible to pass a
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// brace-enclosed initializer list to a function expecting a `Span`. Such
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// spans constructed from an initializer list must be of type `Span<const T>`.
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//
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// void Process(absl::Span<const int> x);
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// Process({1, 2, 3});
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//
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// Note that as always the array referenced by the span must outlive the span.
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// Since an initializer list constructor acts as if it is fed a temporary
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// array (cf. C++ standard [dcl.init.list]/5), it's safe to use this
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// constructor only when the `std::initializer_list` itself outlives the span.
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// In order to meet this requirement it's sufficient to ensure that neither
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// the span nor a copy of it is used outside of the expression in which it's
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// created:
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//
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// // Assume that this function uses the array directly, not retaining any
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// // copy of the span or pointer to any of its elements.
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// void Process(absl::Span<const int> ints);
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//
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// // Okay: the std::initializer_list<int> will reference a temporary array
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// // that isn't destroyed until after the call to Process returns.
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// Process({ 17, 19 });
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//
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// // Not okay: the storage used by the std::initializer_list<int> is not
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// // allowed to be referenced after the first line.
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// absl::Span<const int> ints = { 17, 19 };
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// Process(ints);
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//
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// // Not okay for the same reason as above: even when the elements of the
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// // initializer list expression are not temporaries the underlying array
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// // is, so the initializer list must still outlive the span.
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// const int foo = 17;
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// absl::Span<const int> ints = { foo };
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// Process(ints);
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//
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template <typename LazyT = T,
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typename = EnableIfConstView<LazyT>>
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Span(
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std::initializer_list<value_type> v) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/explicit)
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: Span(v.begin(), v.size()) {}
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// Accessors
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// Span::data()
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//
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// Returns a pointer to the span's underlying array of data (which is held
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// outside the span).
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constexpr pointer data() const noexcept { return ptr_; }
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// Span::size()
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//
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// Returns the size of this span.
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constexpr size_type size() const noexcept { return len_; }
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// Span::length()
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//
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// Returns the length (size) of this span.
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constexpr size_type length() const noexcept { return size(); }
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// Span::empty()
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//
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// Returns a boolean indicating whether or not this span is considered empty.
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constexpr bool empty() const noexcept { return size() == 0; }
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// Span::operator[]
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//
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// Returns a reference to the i'th element of this span.
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constexpr reference operator[](size_type i) const noexcept {
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// MSVC 2015 accepts this as constexpr, but not ptr_[i]
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return *(data() + i);
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}
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// Span::at()
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//
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// Returns a reference to the i'th element of this span.
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constexpr reference at(size_type i) const {
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return ABSL_PREDICT_TRUE(i < size()) //
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? *(data() + i)
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: (base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange(
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"Span::at failed bounds check"),
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*(data() + i));
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}
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// Span::front()
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//
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// Returns a reference to the first element of this span.
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constexpr reference front() const noexcept {
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return ABSL_ASSERT(size() > 0), *data();
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}
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// Span::back()
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//
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// Returns a reference to the last element of this span.
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constexpr reference back() const noexcept {
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return ABSL_ASSERT(size() > 0), *(data() + size() - 1);
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}
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// Span::begin()
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//
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// Returns an iterator to the first element of this span.
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constexpr iterator begin() const noexcept { return data(); }
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// Span::cbegin()
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//
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// Returns a const iterator to the first element of this span.
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constexpr const_iterator cbegin() const noexcept { return begin(); }
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// Span::end()
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//
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// Returns an iterator to the last element of this span.
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constexpr iterator end() const noexcept { return data() + size(); }
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// Span::cend()
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//
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// Returns a const iterator to the last element of this span.
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constexpr const_iterator cend() const noexcept { return end(); }
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// Span::rbegin()
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//
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// Returns a reverse iterator starting at the last element of this span.
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constexpr reverse_iterator rbegin() const noexcept {
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return reverse_iterator(end());
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}
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// Span::crbegin()
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//
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// Returns a reverse const iterator starting at the last element of this span.
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constexpr const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const noexcept { return rbegin(); }
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// Span::rend()
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//
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// Returns a reverse iterator starting at the first element of this span.
|
|
constexpr reverse_iterator rend() const noexcept {
|
|
return reverse_iterator(begin());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Span::crend()
|
|
//
|
|
// Returns a reverse iterator starting at the first element of this span.
|
|
constexpr const_reverse_iterator crend() const noexcept { return rend(); }
|
|
|
|
// Span mutations
|
|
|
|
// Span::remove_prefix()
|
|
//
|
|
// Removes the first `n` elements from the span.
|
|
void remove_prefix(size_type n) noexcept {
|
|
assert(size() >= n);
|
|
ptr_ += n;
|
|
len_ -= n;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Span::remove_suffix()
|
|
//
|
|
// Removes the last `n` elements from the span.
|
|
void remove_suffix(size_type n) noexcept {
|
|
assert(size() >= n);
|
|
len_ -= n;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Span::subspan()
|
|
//
|
|
// Returns a `Span` starting at element `pos` and of length `len`. Both `pos`
|
|
// and `len` are of type `size_type` and thus non-negative. Parameter `pos`
|
|
// must be <= size(). Any `len` value that points past the end of the span
|
|
// will be trimmed to at most size() - `pos`. A default `len` value of `npos`
|
|
// ensures the returned subspan continues until the end of the span.
|
|
//
|
|
// Examples:
|
|
//
|
|
// std::vector<int> vec = {10, 11, 12, 13};
|
|
// absl::MakeSpan(vec).subspan(1, 2); // {11, 12}
|
|
// absl::MakeSpan(vec).subspan(2, 8); // {12, 13}
|
|
// absl::MakeSpan(vec).subspan(1); // {11, 12, 13}
|
|
// absl::MakeSpan(vec).subspan(4); // {}
|
|
// absl::MakeSpan(vec).subspan(5); // throws std::out_of_range
|
|
constexpr Span subspan(size_type pos = 0, size_type len = npos) const {
|
|
return (pos <= size())
|
|
? Span(data() + pos, span_internal::Min(size() - pos, len))
|
|
: (base_internal::ThrowStdOutOfRange("pos > size()"), Span());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
private:
|
|
pointer ptr_;
|
|
size_type len_;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
const typename Span<T>::size_type Span<T>::npos;
|
|
|
|
// Span relationals
|
|
|
|
// Equality is compared element-by-element, while ordering is lexicographical.
|
|
// We provide three overloads for each operator to cover any combination on the
|
|
// left or right hand side of mutable Span<T>, read-only Span<const T>, and
|
|
// convertible-to-read-only Span<T>.
|
|
// TODO(zhangxy): Due to MSVC overload resolution bug with partial ordering
|
|
// template functions, 5 overloads per operator is needed as a workaround. We
|
|
// should update them to 3 overloads per operator using non-deduced context like
|
|
// string_view, i.e.
|
|
// - (Span<T>, Span<T>)
|
|
// - (Span<T>, non_deduced<Span<const T>>)
|
|
// - (non_deduced<Span<const T>>, Span<T>)
|
|
|
|
// operator==
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator==(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::EqualImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator==(Span<const T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::EqualImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator==(Span<T> a, Span<const T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::EqualImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator==(const U& a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::EqualImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator==(Span<T> a, const U& b) {
|
|
return span_internal::EqualImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// operator!=
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator!=(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(a == b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator!=(Span<const T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(a == b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator!=(Span<T> a, Span<const T> b) {
|
|
return !(a == b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator!=(const U& a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(a == b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator!=(Span<T> a, const U& b) {
|
|
return !(a == b);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// operator<
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator<(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::LessThanImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator<(Span<const T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::LessThanImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator<(Span<T> a, Span<const T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::LessThanImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator<(const U& a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return span_internal::LessThanImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator<(Span<T> a, const U& b) {
|
|
return span_internal::LessThanImpl<const T>(a, b);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// operator>
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator>(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return b < a;
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator>(Span<const T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return b < a;
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator>(Span<T> a, Span<const T> b) {
|
|
return b < a;
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator>(const U& a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return b < a;
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator>(Span<T> a, const U& b) {
|
|
return b < a;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// operator<=
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator<=(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(b < a);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator<=(Span<const T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(b < a);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator<=(Span<T> a, Span<const T> b) {
|
|
return !(b < a);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator<=(const U& a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(b < a);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator<=(Span<T> a, const U& b) {
|
|
return !(b < a);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// operator>=
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator>=(Span<T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(a < b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator>=(Span<const T> a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(a < b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T>
|
|
bool operator>=(Span<T> a, Span<const T> b) {
|
|
return !(a < b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator>=(const U& a, Span<T> b) {
|
|
return !(a < b);
|
|
}
|
|
template <typename T, typename U,
|
|
typename = span_internal::EnableIfConvertibleToSpanConst<U, T>>
|
|
bool operator>=(Span<T> a, const U& b) {
|
|
return !(a < b);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// MakeSpan()
|
|
//
|
|
// Constructs a mutable `Span<T>`, deducing `T` automatically from either a
|
|
// container or pointer+size.
|
|
//
|
|
// Because a read-only `Span<const T>` is implicitly constructed from container
|
|
// types regardless of whether the container itself is a const container,
|
|
// constructing mutable spans of type `Span<T>` from containers requires
|
|
// explicit constructors. The container-accepting version of `MakeSpan()`
|
|
// deduces the type of `T` by the constness of the pointer received from the
|
|
// container's `data()` member. Similarly, the pointer-accepting version returns
|
|
// a `Span<const T>` if `T` is `const`, and a `Span<T>` otherwise.
|
|
//
|
|
// Examples:
|
|
//
|
|
// void MyRoutine(absl::Span<MyComplicatedType> a) {
|
|
// ...
|
|
// };
|
|
// // my_vector is a container of non-const types
|
|
// std::vector<MyComplicatedType> my_vector;
|
|
//
|
|
// // Constructing a Span implicitly attempts to create a Span of type
|
|
// // `Span<const T>`
|
|
// MyRoutine(my_vector); // error, type mismatch
|
|
//
|
|
// // Explicitly constructing the Span is verbose
|
|
// MyRoutine(absl::Span<MyComplicatedType>(my_vector));
|
|
//
|
|
// // Use MakeSpan() to make an absl::Span<T>
|
|
// MyRoutine(absl::MakeSpan(my_vector));
|
|
//
|
|
// // Construct a span from an array ptr+size
|
|
// absl::Span<T> my_span() {
|
|
// return absl::MakeSpan(&array[0], num_elements_);
|
|
// }
|
|
//
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename T>
|
|
constexpr Span<T> MakeSpan(T* ptr, size_t size) noexcept {
|
|
return Span<T>(ptr, size);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename T>
|
|
Span<T> MakeSpan(T* begin, T* end) noexcept {
|
|
return ABSL_ASSERT(begin <= end), Span<T>(begin, end - begin);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename C>
|
|
constexpr auto MakeSpan(C& c) noexcept // NOLINT(runtime/references)
|
|
-> decltype(absl::MakeSpan(span_internal::GetData(c), c.size())) {
|
|
return MakeSpan(span_internal::GetData(c), c.size());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename T, size_t N>
|
|
constexpr Span<T> MakeSpan(T (&array)[N]) noexcept {
|
|
return Span<T>(array, N);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// MakeConstSpan()
|
|
//
|
|
// Constructs a `Span<const T>` as with `MakeSpan`, deducing `T` automatically,
|
|
// but always returning a `Span<const T>`.
|
|
//
|
|
// Examples:
|
|
//
|
|
// void ProcessInts(absl::Span<const int> some_ints);
|
|
//
|
|
// // Call with a pointer and size.
|
|
// int array[3] = { 0, 0, 0 };
|
|
// ProcessInts(absl::MakeConstSpan(&array[0], 3));
|
|
//
|
|
// // Call with a [begin, end) pair.
|
|
// ProcessInts(absl::MakeConstSpan(&array[0], &array[3]));
|
|
//
|
|
// // Call directly with an array.
|
|
// ProcessInts(absl::MakeConstSpan(array));
|
|
//
|
|
// // Call with a contiguous container.
|
|
// std::vector<int> some_ints = ...;
|
|
// ProcessInts(absl::MakeConstSpan(some_ints));
|
|
// ProcessInts(absl::MakeConstSpan(std::vector<int>{ 0, 0, 0 }));
|
|
//
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename T>
|
|
constexpr Span<const T> MakeConstSpan(T* ptr, size_t size) noexcept {
|
|
return Span<const T>(ptr, size);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename T>
|
|
Span<const T> MakeConstSpan(T* begin, T* end) noexcept {
|
|
return ABSL_ASSERT(begin <= end), Span<const T>(begin, end - begin);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename C>
|
|
constexpr auto MakeConstSpan(const C& c) noexcept -> decltype(MakeSpan(c)) {
|
|
return MakeSpan(c);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
template <int&... ExplicitArgumentBarrier, typename T, size_t N>
|
|
constexpr Span<const T> MakeConstSpan(const T (&array)[N]) noexcept {
|
|
return Span<const T>(array, N);
|
|
}
|
|
} // namespace absl
|
|
#endif // ABSL_TYPES_SPAN_H_
|