| std::span(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::span(3) | 
NAME¶
std::span - std::span
Synopsis¶
 Defined in header <span>
  
   template<
  
   class T, (since C++20)
  
   std::size_t Extent = std::dynamic_extent
  
   > class span;
  
   The class template span describes an object that can refer to a contiguous
    sequence
  
   of objects with the first element of the sequence at position zero. A span
    can
  
   either have a static extent, in which case the number of elements in the
    sequence is
  
   known at compile-time and encoded in the type, or a dynamic extent.
  
   If a span has dynamic extent a typical implementation holds two members: a
    pointer
  
   to T and a size. A span with static extent may have only one member: a
    pointer to T.
  
   Every specialization of std::span is a TriviallyCopyable type. (since
  C++23)
Template parameters¶
 T - element type; must be a complete object type that is not an
    abstract class
  
   type
  
   Extent - the number of elements in the sequence, or std::dynamic_extent if
    dynamic
Member types¶
 Member type Definition
  
   element_type T
  
   value_type std::remove_cv_t<T>
  
   size_type std::size_t
  
   difference_type std::ptrdiff_t
  
   pointer T*
  
   const_pointer const T*
  
   reference T&
  
   const_reference const T&
  
   implementation-defined LegacyRandomAccessIterator,
  
   iterator ConstexprIterator, and contiguous_iterator whose value_type is
  
   value_type
  
   reverse_iterator std::reverse_iterator<iterator>
  
   Note: iterator is a mutable iterator if T is not const-qualified.
  
   All requirements on the iterator types of a Container apply to the iterator
    type of
  
   span as well.
  
   Member constant
  
   static constexpr std::size_t extent = Extent;
Member functions¶
 constructor constructs a span
  
   (public member function)
  
   operator= assigns a span
  
   (public member function)
Iterators¶
 begin returns an iterator to the beginning
  
   (C++20) (public member function)
  
   end returns an iterator to the end
  
   (C++20) (public member function)
  
   rbegin returns a reverse iterator to the beginning
  
   (C++20) (public member function)
  
   rend returns a reverse iterator to the end
  
   (C++20) (public member function)
Element access¶
 front access the first element
  
   (C++20) (public member function)
  
   back access the last element
  
   (C++20) (public member function)
  
   operator[] accesses an element of the sequence
  
   (public member function)
  
   data returns a pointer to the beginning of the sequence of elements
  
   (public member function)
Observers¶
 size returns the number of elements in the sequence
  
   (public member function)
  
   size_bytes returns the size of the sequence in bytes
  
   (public member function)
  
   empty checks if the sequence is empty
  
   (public member function)
  
   Subviews
  
   first obtains a subspan consisting of the first N elements of the sequence
  
   (public member function)
  
   last obtains a subspan consisting of the last N elements of the sequence
  
   (public member function)
  
   subspan obtains a subspan
  
   (public member function)
Non-member functions¶
 as_bytes converts a span into a view of its underlying bytes
  
   as_writable_bytes (function template)
  
   (C++20)
  
   Non-member constant
  
   dynamic_extent a constant of type size_t signifying that the span has dynamic
    extent
  
   (C++20) (constant)
  
   Helper templates
  
   template<class T, std::size_t Extent>
  
   inline constexpr bool ranges::enable_borrowed_range<std::span<T,
    Extent>> = true;
  
   This specialization of ranges::enable_borrowed_range makes span satisfy
  
   borrowed_range.
  
   template<class T, std::size_t Extent>
  
   inline constexpr bool ranges::enable_view<std::span<T, Extent>> =
    true;
  
   This specialization of ranges::enable_view makes span satisfy view.
  
   Deduction guides
Notes¶
 Specializations of std::span are already trivially copyable types
    in all existing
  
   implementations, even before the formal requirement introduced in C++23.
  
   Feature-test macro: __cpp_lib_span
Example¶
The example uses std::span to implement some algorithms on contiguous ranges.
// Run this code
  
   #include <algorithm>
  
   #include <cstddef>
  
   #include <iostream>
  
   #include <span>
  
   template<class T, std::size_t N> [[nodiscard]]
  
   constexpr auto slide(std::span<T,N> s, std::size_t offset, std::size_t
    width) {
  
   return s.subspan(offset, offset + width <= s.size() ? width : 0U);
  
   }
  
   template<class T, std::size_t N, std::size_t M> [[nodiscard]]
  
   constexpr bool starts_with(std::span<T,N> data, std::span<T,M>
    prefix) {
  
   return data.size() >= prefix.size()
  
   && std::equal(prefix.begin(), prefix.end(), data.begin());
  
   }
  
   template<class T, std::size_t N, std::size_t M> [[nodiscard]]
  
   constexpr bool ends_with(std::span<T,N> data, std::span<T,M>
    suffix) {
  
   return data.size() >= suffix.size()
  
   && std::equal(data.end() - suffix.size(), data.end(),
  
   suffix.end() - suffix.size());
  
   }
  
   template<class T, std::size_t N, std::size_t M> [[nodiscard]]
  
   constexpr bool contains(std::span<T,N> span, std::span<T,M> sub)
    {
  
   return std::search(span.begin(), span.end(), sub.begin(), sub.end()) !=
    span.end();
  
   // return std::ranges::search(span, sub).begin() != span.end();
  
   }
  
   void print(const auto& seq) {
  
   for (const auto& elem : seq) std::cout << elem << ' ';
  
   std::cout << '\n';
  
   }
  
   int main()
  
   {
  
   constexpr int a[] { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 };
  
   constexpr int b[] { 8, 7, 6 };
  
   for (std::size_t offset{}; ; ++offset) {
  
   static constexpr std::size_t width{6};
  
   auto s = slide(std::span{a}, offset, width);
  
   if (s.empty())
  
   break;
  
   print(s);
  
   }
  
   static_assert(
  
   starts_with( std::span{a}, std::span{a, 4} ) and
  
   starts_with( std::span{a + 1, 4}, std::span{a + 1, 3} ) and
  
   ! starts_with( std::span{a}, std::span{b} ) and
  
   ! starts_with( std::span{a, 8}, std::span{a + 1, 3} ) and
  
   ends_with( std::span{a}, std::span{a + 6, 3} ) and
  
   ! ends_with( std::span{a}, std::span{a + 6, 2} ) and
  
   contains( std::span{a}, std::span{a + 1, 4} ) and
  
   ! contains( std::span{a, 8}, std::span{a, 9} )
  
   );
  
   }
Output:¶
 0 1 2 3 4 5
  
   1 2 3 4 5 6
  
   2 3 4 5 6 7
  
   3 4 5 6 7 8
  
   Defect reports
  
   The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to
  
   previously published C++ standards.
  
   DR Applied to Behavior as published Correct behavior
  
   P2325R3 C++20 span of non-zero static they are as default_initializable is
    not
  
   extents were not view required
See also¶
 initializer_list creates a temporary array in list-initialization
    and then
  
   (C++11) references it
  
   (class template)
  
   basic_string_view read-only string view
  
   (C++17) (class template)
  
   ranges::subrange combines an iterator-sentinel pair into a view
  
   (C++20) (class template)
| 2022.07.31 | http://cppreference.com |