struct to_chars_result;
(since C++17)std::to_chars_result
is the return type of std::to_chars. It has no base classes, and only has the following members.
friend bool operator==( const to_chars_result&,
const to_chars_result& ) = default;
Compares the two arguments using default comparisons (which uses operator== to compare ptr
and ec
respectively).
This function is not visible to ordinary unqualified or qualified lookup, and can only be found by argument-dependent lookup when std::to_chars_result is an associated class of the arguments.
The !=
operator is synthesized from operator==
.
constexpr explicit operator bool() const noexcept;
(since C++26)Checks whether the conversion is successful. Returns ec == std::errc{}.
[edit] Notes [edit] Example#include <array> #include <charconv> #include <iostream> #include <string_view> #include <system_error> void show_to_chars(auto... format_args) { std::array<char, 10> str; #if __cpp_lib_to_chars >= 202306L and __cpp_structured_bindings >= 202406L // use C++26 structured bindings declaration as condition (P0963) // and C++26 to_chars_result::operator bool() for error checking (P2497) if (auto [ptr, ec] = std::to_chars(str.data(), str.data() + str.size(), format_args...)) std::cout << std::string_view(str.data(), ptr) << '\n'; else std::cout << std::make_error_code(ec).message() << '\n'; #elif __cpp_lib_to_chars >= 202306L // use C++26 to_chars_result::operator bool() for error checking (P2497) if (auto result = std::to_chars(str.data(), str.data() + str.size(), format_args...)) std::cout << std::string_view(str.data(), result.ptr) << '\n'; else std::cout << std::make_error_code(result.ec).message() << '\n'; #else // fallback to C++17 if-with-initializer and structured bindings if (auto [ptr, ec] = std::to_chars(str.data(), str.data() + str.size(), format_args...); ec == std::errc()) std::cout << std::string_view(str.data(), ptr - str.data()) << '\n'; else std::cout << std::make_error_code(ec).message() << '\n'; #endif } int main() { show_to_chars(42); show_to_chars(+3.14159F); show_to_chars(-3.14159, std::chars_format::fixed); show_to_chars(-3.14159, std::chars_format::scientific, 3); show_to_chars(3.1415926535, std::chars_format::fixed, 10); }
Possible output:
42 3.14159 -3.14159 -3.142e+00 Value too large for defined data type[edit] See also converts an integer or floating-point value to a character sequence
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