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469ac134f3e5a39b179ce279b61b2162d895f10a
* Start upper bound fields search from `4` fields, to avoid slow startup on typical workloads * Inline the `fields_count_binary_search_unbounded` function to reduce template instantiations depth by 1 * Renamed `min` to `min_of_size_t` to avoid weired syntax * Applied idea of better error reporting from #120 * Do not start fields count computation if one of the static asserts failed. That speedups error reporting in edge cases * Use `std::*_t` versions of traits as they are faster in some implementations * Rewrite binary search to simplify it and to avoid degradation to linear search on types that have constructor from variadic pack * Remove default template parameters to simplify code As a result, the whole test suite now runs 10%-25% faster on MSVC, ~20% faster on Clang, and 7%-20% faster on GCC.
Boost.PFR
This is a C++14 library for very basic reflection that gives you access to structure elements by index and provides other std::tuple like methods for user defined types without any macro or boilerplate code.
Boost.PFR is a part of the Boost C++ Libraries. However, Boost.PFR is a header only library that does not depend on Boost. You can just copy the content of the "include" folder from the github into your project, and the library will work fine.
For a version of the library without boost:: namespace see PFR.
Test results
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|---|---|---|---|
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Latest developer documentation
Motivating Example #0
#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <string>
#include "boost/pfr.hpp"
struct some_person {
std::string name;
unsigned birth_year;
};
int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) {
some_person val{"Edgar Allan Poe", 1809};
std::cout << boost::pfr::get<0>(val) // No macro!
<< " was born in " << boost::pfr::get<1>(val); // Works with any aggregate initializables!
if (argc > 1) {
std::ofstream ofs(argv[1]);
ofs << boost::pfr::io(val); // File now contains: {"Edgar Allan Poe", 1809}
}
}
Outputs:
Edgar Allan Poe was born in 1809
Motivating Example #1
#include <iostream>
#include "boost/pfr.hpp"
struct my_struct { // no ostream operator defined!
int i;
char c;
double d;
};
int main() {
my_struct s{100, 'H', 3.141593};
std::cout << "my_struct has " << boost::pfr::tuple_size<my_struct>::value
<< " fields: " << boost::pfr::io(s) << "\n";
}
Outputs:
my_struct has 3 fields: {100, H, 3.14159}
Motivating Example #2
#include <iostream>
#include "boost/pfr.hpp"
struct my_struct { // no ostream operator defined!
std::string s;
int i;
};
int main() {
my_struct s{{"Das ist fantastisch!"}, 100};
std::cout << "my_struct has " << boost::pfr::tuple_size<my_struct>::value
<< " fields: " << boost::pfr::io(s) << "\n";
}
Outputs:
my_struct has 2 fields: {"Das ist fantastisch!", 100}
Motivating Example #3
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <boost/config/warning_disable.hpp>
#include <boost/spirit/home/x3.hpp>
#include <boost/fusion/include/adapt_boost_pfr.hpp>
#include "boost/pfr/io.hpp"
namespace x3 = boost::spirit::x3;
struct ast_employee { // No BOOST_FUSION_ADAPT_STRUCT defined
int age;
std::string forename;
std::string surname;
double salary;
};
auto const quoted_string = x3::lexeme['"' >> +(x3::ascii::char_ - '"') >> '"'];
x3::rule<class employee, ast_employee> const employee = "employee";
auto const employee_def =
x3::lit("employee")
>> '{'
>> x3::int_ >> ','
>> quoted_string >> ','
>> quoted_string >> ','
>> x3::double_
>> '}'
;
BOOST_SPIRIT_DEFINE(employee);
int main() {
std::string str = R"(employee{34, "Chip", "Douglas", 2500.00})";
ast_employee emp;
x3::phrase_parse(str.begin(),
str.end(),
employee,
x3::ascii::space,
emp);
std::cout << boost::pfr::io(emp) << std::endl;
}
Outputs:
(34 Chip Douglas 2500)
Requirements and Limitations
License
Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
Description
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