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    | std::ranges::not_equal_to(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::ranges::not_equal_to(3) | 
NAME¶
std::ranges::not_equal_to - std::ranges::not_equal_to
Synopsis¶
 Defined in header <functional>
  
   struct not_equal_to; (since C++20)
  
   Function object for performing comparisons. Deduces the parameter types of
    the
  
   function call operator from the arguments (but not the return type).
  
   Implementation-defined strict total order over pointers
  
   The function call operator yields the implementation-defined strict total
    order over
  
   pointers if the = operator between arguments invokes a built-in comparison
    operator
  
   for a pointer, even if the built-in = operator does not.
  
   The implementation-defined strict total order is consistent with the partial
    order
  
   imposed by built-in comparison operators (<=>, <, >, <=, and
    >=), and consistent
  
   among following standard function objects:
  
   * std::less, std::greater, std::less_equal, and std::greater_equal, when the
  
   template argument is a pointer type or void
  
   * std::ranges::equal_to, std::ranges::not_equal_to, std::ranges::less,
  
   std::ranges::greater, std::ranges::less_equal, std::ranges::greater_equal,
    and
  
   std::compare_three_way
Member types¶
 Member type Definition
  
   is_transparent /* unspecified */
Member functions¶
 operator() checks if the arguments are not equal
  
   (public member function)
std::ranges::not_equal_to::operator()
  
   template< class T, class U >
  
   requires std::equality_comparable_with<T, U> // with different sematic
  
   requirements
  
   constexpr bool operator()(T&& t, U&& u) const;
  
   Compares t and u. Equivalent to return
    !ranges::equal_to{}(std::forward<T>(t),
  
   std::forward<U>(u));.
Notes¶
 Unlike std::not_equal_to, std::ranges::not_equal_to requires both
    == and != to be
  
   valid (via the equality_comparable_with constraint), and is entirely defined
    in
  
   terms of std::ranges::equal_to.
Example¶
 This section is incomplete
  
   Reason: no example
  
   Defect reports
  
   The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to
  
   previously published C++ standards.
  
   DR Applied to Behavior as published Correct behavior
  
   LWG 3530 C++20 syntactic checks were relaxed while only semantic requirements
  
   comparing pointers relaxed
See also¶
 not_equal_to function object implementing x != y
  
   (class template)
| 2022.07.31 | http://cppreference.com |