| std::indirectly_writable(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::indirectly_writable(3) | 
NAME¶
std::indirectly_writable - std::indirectly_writable
Synopsis¶
 Defined in header <iterator>
  
   template<class Out, class T>
  
   concept indirectly_writable =
  
   requires(Out&& o, T&& t) {
  
   *o = std::forward<T>(t);
  
   *std::forward<Out>(o) = std::forward<T>(t); (since
  
   const_cast<const std::iter_reference_t<Out>&&>(*o) =
    std::forward<T>(t); C++20)
  
   const_cast<const
    std::iter_reference_t<Out>&&>(*std::forward<Out>(o))
    =
  
   std::forward<T>(t);
  
   };
  
   // none of the four expressions above are required to be
  
   equality-preserving
  
   The concept indirectly_writable<Out, T> specifies the requirements for
    writing a
  
   value whose type and value category are encoded by T into an iterator Out's
  
   referenced object.
  
   Semantic requirements
  
   Let e be an expression such that decltype((e)) is T, and o be a
    dereferenceable
  
   object of type Out, then indirectly_writable<Out, T> is modeled only
    if:
  
   * If std::indirectly_readable<Out> is modeled and
    std::iter_value_t<Out> is the
  
   same type as std::decay_t<T>, then *o after any above assignment is
    equal to the
  
   value of e before the assignment.
  
   o is not required to be dereferenceable after evaluating any of the
    assignment
  
   expressions above. If e is an xvalue, the resulting state of the object it
    denotes
  
   is valid but unspecified.
  
   Equality preservation
  
   An expression is equality preserving if it results in equal outputs given
    equal
  
   inputs.
  
   * The inputs to an expression consist of its operands.
  
   * The outputs of an expression consist of its result and all operands
    modified by
  
   the expression (if any).
  
   In specification of standard concepts, operands are defined as the largest
  
   subexpressions that include only:
  
   * an id-expression, and
  
   * invocations of std::move, std::forward, and std::declval.
  
   The cv-qualification and value category of each operand is determined by
    assuming
  
   that each template type parameter denotes a cv-unqualified complete non-array
    object
  
   type.
  
   Every expression required to be equality preserving is further required to be
  
   stable: two evaluations of such an expression with the same input objects
    must have
  
   equal outputs absent any explicit intervening modification of those input
    objects.
Notes¶
 The only valid use of operator* is on the left side of an
    assignment expression.
  
   Assignment through the same value of an indirectly writable type may happen
    only
  
   once.
  
   The required expressions with const_cast prevent indirectly_readable objects
    with
  
   prvalue reference types from satisfying the syntactic requirements of
  
   indirectly_writable by accident, while permitting proxy references to
    continue to
  
   work as long as their constness is shallow. See Ranges TS issue 381.
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