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Binds the specified names to subobjects or elements of the initializer.
Like a reference, a structured binding is an alias to an existing object. Unlike a reference, a structured binding does not have to be of a reference type.
attr (optional)decl-specifier-seqref-qualifier (optional)[ sb-identifier-list] initializer ; | |||||||||
attr | - | sequence of any number ofattributes | ||
decl-specifier-seq | - | sequence of the following specifiers (following the rules ofsimple declaration):
| ||
ref-qualifier | - | either& or&& | ||
sb-identifier-list | - | list of comma-separated identifiers introduced by this declaration, each identifier may be followed by anattribute specifier sequence(since C++26) | ||
initializer | - | an initializer (see below) |
initializer may be one of the following:
= expression | (1) | ||||||||
{ expression } | (2) | ||||||||
( expression) | (3) | ||||||||
expression | - | any expression (except unparenthesizedcomma expressions) |
A structured binding declaration introduces all identifiers in thesb-identifier-list as names in the surrounding scope and binds them to subobjects or elements of the object denoted byexpression. The bindings so introduced are calledstructured bindings.
One of the identifiers in thesb-identifier-list can be preceded by an ellipsis. Such an identifier introduces astructured binding pack. The identifier must declare atemplated entity. | (since C++26) |
A structured binding is an identifier in thesb-identifier-list that is not preceded by an ellipsis, or an element of a structured binding pack introduced in the same identifier list(since C++26).
Contents |
A structured binding declaration first introduces a uniquely-named variable (here denoted bye) to hold the value of the initializer, as follows:
A
and noref-qualifier is present, definee asattr (optional)specifiersA e;
, wherespecifiers is a sequence of the specifiers indecl-specifier-seq excludingauto.e
initializer ;
.We useE
to denote the type of the identifier expressione (i.e.,E
is the equivalent ofstd::remove_reference_t<decltype((e))>).
Astructured binding size ofE
is the number of structured bindings that need to be introduced by the structured binding declaration.
The number of identifiers insb-identifier-list must be equal to the structured binding size of | (until C++26) |
Given the number of identifiers insb-identifier-list asN and the structured binding size of
| (since C++26) |
struct C{int x, y, z;}; template<class T>void now_i_know_my(){auto[a, b, c]= C();// OK: a, b, c refer to x, y, z, respectivelyauto[d, ...e]= C();// OK: d refers to x; ...e refers to y and zauto[...f, g]= C();// OK: ...f refers x and y; g refers to zauto[h, i, j, ...k]= C();// OK: the pack k is emptyauto[l, m, n, o, ...p]= C();// error: structured binding size is too small}
A structured binding declaration performs the binding in one of three possible ways, depending onE
:
E
is an array type, then the names are bound to the array elements.E
is a non-union class type andstd::tuple_size<E> is a complete type with a member namedvalue
(regardless of the type or accessibility of such member), then the "tuple-like" binding protocol is used.E
is a non-union class type butstd::tuple_size<E> is not a complete type, then the names are bound to the accessible data members ofE
.Each of the three cases is described in more detail below.
Each structured binding has areferenced type, defined in the description below. This type is the type returned bydecltype
when applied to an unparenthesized structured binding.
Each structured binding in thesb-identifier-list becomes the name of an lvalue that refers to the corresponding element of the array. The structured binding size ofE
is equal to the number of array elements.
Thereferenced type for each structured binding is the array element type. Note that if the array typeE
is cv-qualified, so is its element type.
int a[2]={1,2}; auto[x, y]= a;// creates e[2], copies a into e,// then x refers to e[0], y refers to e[1]auto&[xr, yr]= a;// xr refers to a[0], yr refers to a[1]
The expressionstd::tuple_size<E>::value must be a well-formedintegral constant expression, and the structured binding size ofE
is equal tostd::tuple_size<E>::value.
For each structured binding, a variable whose type is "reference tostd::tuple_element<I, E>::type" is introduced: lvalue reference if its corresponding initializer is an lvalue, rvalue reference otherwise. The initializer for theIth variable is
get
in the scope ofE
by class member access lookup finds at least one declaration that is a function template whose first template parameter is a constant parameterIn these initializer expressions,e is an lvalue if the type of the entitye is an lvalue reference (this only happens if theref-qualifier is&
or if it is&&
and the initializer expression is an lvalue) and an xvalue otherwise (this effectively performs a kind of perfect forwarding),I is astd::size_t prvalue, and<I> is always interpreted as a template parameter list.
The variable has the samestorage duration ase.
The structured binding then becomes the name of an lvalue that refers to the object bound to said variable.
Thereferenced type for theIth structured binding isstd::tuple_element<I, E>::type.
float x{};char y{};int z{}; std::tuple<float&,char&&,int> tpl(x, std::move(y), z);constauto&[a, b, c]= tpl;// using Tpl = const std::tuple<float&, char&&, int>;// a names a structured binding that refers to x (initialized from get<0>(tpl))// decltype(a) is std::tuple_element<0, Tpl>::type, i.e. float&// b names a structured binding that refers to y (initialized from get<1>(tpl))// decltype(b) is std::tuple_element<1, Tpl>::type, i.e. char&&// c names a structured binding that refers to the third component of tpl, get<2>(tpl)// decltype(c) is std::tuple_element<2, Tpl>::type, i.e. const int
Every non-static data member ofE
must be a direct member ofE
or the same base class ofE
, and must be well-formed in the context of the structured binding when named ase.name.E
may not have an anonymous union member. The structured binding size ofE
is equal to the number of non-static data members.
Each structured binding insb-identifier-list becomes the name of an lvalue that refers to the next member ofe in declaration order (bit-fields are supported); the type of the lvalue is that ofe.mI, wheremI
refers to theIth member.
Thereferenced type of theIth structured binding is the type ofe.mI if it is not a reference type, or the declared type ofmI
otherwise.
#include <iostream> struct S{ mutableint x1:2;volatiledouble y1;}; S f(){return S{1,2.3};} int main(){constauto[x, y]= f();// x is an int lvalue identifying the 2-bit bit-field// y is a const volatile double lvaluestd::cout<< x<<' '<< y<<'\n';// 1 2.3 x=-2;// OK// y = -2.; // Error: y is const-qualifiedstd::cout<< x<<' '<< y<<'\n';// -2 2.3}
LetvalI be the object or reference named by theIth structured binding insb-identifier-list :
Structured bindings cannot beconstrained: template<class T>concept C=true; Cauto[x, y]=std::pair{1,2};// error: constrained | (since C++20) |
The lookup for memberget
ignores accessibility as usual and also ignores the exact type of the constant template parameter. A privatetemplate<char*>void get(); member will cause the member interpretation to be used, even though it is ill-formed.
The portion of the declaration preceding[
applies to the hidden variablee, not to the introduced structured bindings:
The tuple-like interpretation is always used ifstd::tuple_size<E> is a complete type with a member namedvalue
, even if that would cause the program to be ill-formed:
struct A{int x;}; namespace std{template<>struct tuple_size<::A>{void value();};} auto[x]= A{};// error; the "data member" interpretation is not considered.
The usual rules for reference-binding to temporaries (including lifetime-extension) apply if aref-qualifier is present and theexpression is a prvalue. In those cases the hidden variablee is a reference that binds to the temporary variablematerialized from the prvalue expression, extending its lifetime. As usual, the binding will fail ife is a non-const lvalue reference:
int a=1; constauto&[x]=std::make_tuple(a);// OK, not danglingauto&[y]=std::make_tuple(a);// error, cannot bind auto& to rvalue std::tupleauto&&[z]=std::make_tuple(a);// also OK
decltype(x), wherex denotes a structured binding, names thereferenced type of that structured binding. In the tuple-like case, this is the type returned bystd::tuple_element, which may not be a reference even though a hidden reference is always introduced in this case. This effectively emulates the behavior of binding to a struct whose non-static data members have the types returned bystd::tuple_element, with the referenceness of the binding itself being a mere implementation detail.
std::tuple<int,int&> f(); auto[x, y]= f();// decltype(x) is int// decltype(y) is int& constauto[z, w]= f();// decltype(z) is const int// decltype(w) is int&
Structured bindings cannot be captured bylambda expressions: #include <cassert> int main(){struct S{int p{6}, q{7};};constauto&[b, d]= S{};auto l=[b, d]{return b* d;};// valid since C++20assert(l()==42);} | (until C++20) |
A structured binding size is allowed to be0 as long as thesb-identifier-list contains exactly one identifier that can only introduce an empty structured binding pack. auto return_empty()->std::tuple<>; template<class>void test_empty(){auto[]= return_empty();// errorauto[...args]= return_empty();// OK, args is an empty packauto[one, ...rest]= return_empty();// error, structured binding size is too small} | (since C++26) |
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
---|---|---|---|
__cpp_structured_bindings | 201606L | (C++17) | Structured bindings |
202403L | (C++26) | Structured bindings with attributes | |
202406L | (C++26) | Structured binding declaration as a condition | |
202411L | (C++26) | Structured bindings can introduce a pack |
#include <iomanip>#include <iostream>#include <set>#include <string> int main(){std::set<std::string> myset{"hello"}; for(int i{2}; i;--i){if(auto[iter, success]= myset.insert("Hello"); success)std::cout<<"Insert is successful. The value is "<<std::quoted(*iter)<<".\n";elsestd::cout<<"The value "<<std::quoted(*iter)<<" already exists in the set.\n";} struct BitFields{// C++20: default member initializer for bit-fieldsint b:4{1}, d:4{2}, p:4{3}, q:4{4};}; {constauto[b, d, p, q]= BitFields{};std::cout<< b<<' '<< d<<' '<< p<<' '<< q<<'\n';} {constauto[b, d, p, q]=[]{return BitFields{4,3,2,1};}();std::cout<< b<<' '<< d<<' '<< p<<' '<< q<<'\n';} { BitFields s; auto&[b, d, p, q]= s;std::cout<< b<<' '<< d<<' '<< p<<' '<< q<<'\n'; b=4, d=3, p=2, q=1;std::cout<< s.b<<' '<< s.d<<' '<< s.p<<' '<< s.q<<'\n';}}
Output:
Insert is successful. The value is "Hello".The value "Hello" already exists in the set.1 2 3 44 3 2 11 2 3 44 3 2 1
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
CWG 2285 | C++17 | expression could refer to the names fromidentifier-list | the declaration is ill-formed in this case |
CWG 2312 | C++17 | the meaning ofmutable was lost in case 3 | its meaning is still kept |
CWG 2313 | C++17 | in case 2, the structure binding variables could be redeclared | cannot be redeclared |
CWG 2339 | C++17 | in case 2, the definition ofI was missing | added the definition |
CWG 2341 (P1091R3) | C++17 | structured bindings could not be declared with static storage duration | allowed |
CWG 2386 | C++17 | the “tuple-like” binding protocol was used wheneverstd::tuple_size<E> is a complete type | used only whenstd::tuple_size<E> has a member value |
CWG 2506 | C++17 | ifexpression is of a cv-qualified array type, the cv-qualification was carried over to E | discards that cv-qualification |
CWG 2635 | C++20 | structured bindings could be constrained | prohibited |
CWG 2867 | C++17 | the initialization order was unclear | made clear |
P0961R1 | C++17 | in case 2, memberget was usedif lookup finds a get of any kind | only if lookup finds a function template with a constant parameter |
P0969R0 | C++17 | in case 3, the members were required to be public | only required to be accessible in the context of the declaration |
(C++11) | creates atuple of lvalue references or unpacks a tuple into individual objects (function template)[edit] |