std::is_base_of
Defined in header <type_traits>
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||
template< class Base, class Derived > struct is_base_of; |
(since C++11) | |
If Derived
is derived from Base
or if both are the same non-union class (in both cases ignoring cv-qualification), provides the member constant value
equal to true. Otherwise value
is false.
If both Base
and Derived
are non-union class types, and they are not the same type (ignoring cv-qualification), Derived
shall be a complete type; otherwise the behavior is undefined.
Helper variable template
template< class Base, class Derived > inline constexpr bool is_base_of_v = is_base_of<Base, Derived>::value; |
(since C++17) | |
Inherited from std::integral_constant
Member constants
value [static] |
true if Derived is derived from Base or if both are the same non-union class (in both cases ignoring cv-qualification), false otherwise (public static member constant) |
Member functions
operator bool |
converts the object to bool, returns value (public member function) |
operator() (C++14) |
returns value (public member function) |
Member types
Type | Definition |
value_type
|
bool
|
type
|
std::integral_constant<bool, value> |
Notes
std::is_base_of<A, B>::value
is true even if A
is a private, protected, or ambiguous base class of B
. In many situations, std::is_convertible<B*, A*> is the more appropriate test.
Although no class is its own base, std::is_base_of<T, T>::value is true because the intent of the trait is to model the "is-a" relationship, and T is a T. Despite that, std::is_base_of<int, int>::value is false because only classes participate in the relationship that this trait models.
Possible Implementation
namespace details { template <typename Base> std::true_type is_base_of_test_func(const volatile Base*); template <typename Base> std::false_type is_base_of_test_func(const volatile void*); template <typename Base, typename Derived> using pre_is_base_of = decltype(is_base_of_test_func<Base>(std::declval<Derived*>())); // with <experimental/type_traits>: // template <typename Base, typename Derived> // using pre_is_base_of2 = std::experimental::detected_or_t<std::true_type, pre_is_base_of, Base, Derived>; template <typename Base, typename Derived, typename = void> struct pre_is_base_of2 : public std::true_type { }; // note std::void_t is a C++17 feature template <typename Base, typename Derived> struct pre_is_base_of2<Base, Derived, std::void_t<pre_is_base_of<Base, Derived>>> : public pre_is_base_of<Base, Derived> { }; } template <typename Base, typename Derived> struct is_base_of : public std::conditional_t< std::is_class<Base>::value && std::is_class<Derived>::value, details::pre_is_base_of2<Base, Derived>, std::false_type > { }; |
Example
#include <iostream> #include <type_traits> class A {}; class B : A {}; class C {}; int main() { std::cout << std::boolalpha; std::cout << "a2b: " << std::is_base_of<A, B>::value << '\n'; std::cout << "b2a: " << std::is_base_of<B, A>::value << '\n'; std::cout << "c2b: " << std::is_base_of<C, B>::value << '\n'; std::cout << "same type: " << std::is_base_of<C, C>::value << '\n'; }
Output:
a2b: true b2a: false c2b: false same type: true
See also
(C++11)(C++20) |
checks if a type can be converted to the other type (class template) |