//===- iterator.h - Utilities for using and defining iterators --*- C++ -*-===// // // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure // // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #ifndef LLVM_ADT_ITERATOR_H #define LLVM_ADT_ITERATOR_H #include #include namespace llvm { /// \brief CRTP base class which implements the entire standard iterator facade /// in terms of a minimal subset of the interface. /// /// Use this when it is reasonable to implement most of the iterator /// functionality in terms of a core subset. If you need special behavior or /// there are performance implications for this, you may want to override the /// relevant members instead. /// /// Note, one abstraction that this does *not* provide is implementing /// subtraction in terms of addition by negating the difference. Negation isn't /// always information preserving, and I can see very reasonable iterator /// designs where this doesn't work well. It doesn't really force much added /// boilerplate anyways. /// /// Another abstraction that this doesn't provide is implementing increment in /// terms of addition of one. These aren't equivalent for all iterator /// categories, and respecting that adds a lot of complexity for little gain. template class iterator_facade_base : public std::iterator { protected: enum { IsRandomAccess = std::is_base_of::value, IsBidirectional = std::is_base_of::value, }; public: DerivedT operator+(DifferenceTypeT n) const { static_assert( IsRandomAccess, "The '+' operator is only defined for random access iterators."); DerivedT tmp = *static_cast(this); tmp += n; return tmp; } friend DerivedT operator+(DifferenceTypeT n, const DerivedT &i) { static_assert( IsRandomAccess, "The '+' operator is only defined for random access iterators."); return i + n; } DerivedT operator-(DifferenceTypeT n) const { static_assert( IsRandomAccess, "The '-' operator is only defined for random access iterators."); DerivedT tmp = *static_cast(this); tmp -= n; return tmp; } DerivedT &operator++() { return static_cast(this)->operator+=(1); } DerivedT operator++(int) { DerivedT tmp = *static_cast(this); ++*static_cast(this); return tmp; } DerivedT &operator--() { static_assert( IsBidirectional, "The decrement operator is only defined for bidirectional iterators."); return static_cast(this)->operator-=(1); } DerivedT operator--(int) { static_assert( IsBidirectional, "The decrement operator is only defined for bidirectional iterators."); DerivedT tmp = *static_cast(this); --*static_cast(this); return tmp; } bool operator!=(const DerivedT &RHS) const { return !static_cast(this)->operator==(RHS); } bool operator>(const DerivedT &RHS) const { static_assert( IsRandomAccess, "Relational operators are only defined for random access iterators."); return !static_cast(this)->operator<(RHS) && !static_cast(this)->operator==(RHS); } bool operator<=(const DerivedT &RHS) const { static_assert( IsRandomAccess, "Relational operators are only defined for random access iterators."); return !static_cast(this)->operator>(RHS); } bool operator>=(const DerivedT &RHS) const { static_assert( IsRandomAccess, "Relational operators are only defined for random access iterators."); return !static_cast(this)->operator<(RHS); } PointerT operator->() const { return &static_cast(this)->operator*(); } ReferenceT operator[](DifferenceTypeT n) const { static_assert(IsRandomAccess, "Subscripting is only defined for random access iterators."); return *static_cast(this)->operator+(n); } }; /// \brief CRTP base class for adapting an iterator to a different type. /// /// This class can be used through CRTP to adapt one iterator into another. /// Typically this is done through providing in the derived class a custom \c /// operator* implementation. Other methods can be overridden as well. template < typename DerivedT, typename WrappedIteratorT, typename IteratorCategoryT = typename std::iterator_traits::iterator_category, typename T = typename std::iterator_traits::value_type, typename DifferenceTypeT = typename std::iterator_traits::difference_type, typename PointerT = T *, typename ReferenceT = T &, // Don't provide these, they are mostly to act as aliases below. typename WrappedTraitsT = std::iterator_traits> class iterator_adaptor_base : public iterator_facade_base { typedef typename iterator_adaptor_base::iterator_facade_base BaseT; protected: WrappedIteratorT I; iterator_adaptor_base() = default; template explicit iterator_adaptor_base( U &&u, typename std::enable_if< !std::is_base_of::type>::type, DerivedT>::value, int>::type = 0) : I(std::forward(u)) {} public: typedef DifferenceTypeT difference_type; DerivedT &operator+=(difference_type n) { static_assert( BaseT::IsRandomAccess, "The '+=' operator is only defined for random access iterators."); I += n; return *static_cast(this); } DerivedT &operator-=(difference_type n) { static_assert( BaseT::IsRandomAccess, "The '-=' operator is only defined for random access iterators."); I -= n; return *static_cast(this); } using BaseT::operator-; difference_type operator-(const DerivedT &RHS) const { static_assert( BaseT::IsRandomAccess, "The '-' operator is only defined for random access iterators."); return I - RHS.I; } // We have to explicitly provide ++ and -- rather than letting the facade // forward to += because WrappedIteratorT might not support +=. using BaseT::operator++; DerivedT &operator++() { ++I; return *static_cast(this); } using BaseT::operator--; DerivedT &operator--() { static_assert( BaseT::IsBidirectional, "The decrement operator is only defined for bidirectional iterators."); --I; return *static_cast(this); } bool operator==(const DerivedT &RHS) const { return I == RHS.I; } bool operator<(const DerivedT &RHS) const { static_assert( BaseT::IsRandomAccess, "Relational operators are only defined for random access iterators."); return I < RHS.I; } ReferenceT operator*() const { return *I; } }; /// \brief An iterator type that allows iterating over the pointees via some /// other iterator. /// /// The typical usage of this is to expose a type that iterates over Ts, but /// which is implemented with some iterator over T*s: /// /// \code /// typedef pointee_iterator::iterator> iterator; /// \endcode template ())>::type> struct pointee_iterator : iterator_adaptor_base< pointee_iterator, WrappedIteratorT, typename std::iterator_traits::iterator_category, T> { pointee_iterator() = default; template pointee_iterator(U &&u) : pointee_iterator::iterator_adaptor_base(std::forward(u)) {} T &operator*() const { return **this->I; } }; } #endif