diff -r 820b22e13ff1 -r 39c28ec933dd imgtools/imglib/boostlibrary/boost/operators.hpp --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/imgtools/imglib/boostlibrary/boost/operators.hpp Mon May 10 19:54:49 2010 +0100 @@ -0,0 +1,943 @@ +// Boost operators.hpp header file ----------------------------------------// + +// (C) Copyright David Abrahams, Jeremy Siek, Daryle Walker 1999-2001. +// Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See +// accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at +// http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) + +// See http://www.boost.org/libs/utility/operators.htm for documentation. + +// Revision History +// 24 May 07 Changed empty_base to depend on T, see +// http://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/979 +// 21 Oct 02 Modified implementation of operators to allow compilers with a +// correct named return value optimization (NRVO) to produce optimal +// code. (Daniel Frey) +// 02 Dec 01 Bug fixed in random_access_iteratable. (Helmut Zeisel) +// 28 Sep 01 Factored out iterator operator groups. (Daryle Walker) +// 27 Aug 01 'left' form for non commutative operators added; +// additional classes for groups of related operators added; +// workaround for empty base class optimization +// bug of GCC 3.0 (Helmut Zeisel) +// 25 Jun 01 output_iterator_helper changes: removed default template +// parameters, added support for self-proxying, additional +// documentation and tests (Aleksey Gurtovoy) +// 29 May 01 Added operator classes for << and >>. Added input and output +// iterator helper classes. Added classes to connect equality and +// relational operators. Added classes for groups of related +// operators. Reimplemented example operator and iterator helper +// classes in terms of the new groups. (Daryle Walker, with help +// from Alexy Gurtovoy) +// 11 Feb 01 Fixed bugs in the iterator helpers which prevented explicitly +// supplied arguments from actually being used (Dave Abrahams) +// 04 Jul 00 Fixed NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE bugs, major cleanup and +// refactoring of compiler workarounds, additional documentation +// (Alexy Gurtovoy and Mark Rodgers with some help and prompting from +// Dave Abrahams) +// 28 Jun 00 General cleanup and integration of bugfixes from Mark Rodgers and +// Jeremy Siek (Dave Abrahams) +// 20 Jun 00 Changes to accommodate Borland C++Builder 4 and Borland C++ 5.5 +// (Mark Rodgers) +// 20 Jun 00 Minor fixes to the prior revision (Aleksey Gurtovoy) +// 10 Jun 00 Support for the base class chaining technique was added +// (Aleksey Gurtovoy). See documentation and the comments below +// for the details. +// 12 Dec 99 Initial version with iterator operators (Jeremy Siek) +// 18 Nov 99 Change name "divideable" to "dividable", remove unnecessary +// specializations of dividable, subtractable, modable (Ed Brey) +// 17 Nov 99 Add comments (Beman Dawes) +// Remove unnecessary specialization of operators<> (Ed Brey) +// 15 Nov 99 Fix less_than_comparable second operand type for first two +// operators.(Beman Dawes) +// 12 Nov 99 Add operators templates (Ed Brey) +// 11 Nov 99 Add single template parameter version for compilers without +// partial specialization (Beman Dawes) +// 10 Nov 99 Initial version + +// 10 Jun 00: +// An additional optional template parameter was added to most of +// operator templates to support the base class chaining technique (see +// documentation for the details). Unfortunately, a straightforward +// implementation of this change would have broken compatibility with the +// previous version of the library by making it impossible to use the same +// template name (e.g. 'addable') for both the 1- and 2-argument versions of +// an operator template. This implementation solves the backward-compatibility +// issue at the cost of some simplicity. +// +// One of the complications is an existence of special auxiliary class template +// 'is_chained_base<>' (see 'detail' namespace below), which is used +// to determine whether its template parameter is a library's operator template +// or not. You have to specialize 'is_chained_base<>' for each new +// operator template you add to the library. +// +// However, most of the non-trivial implementation details are hidden behind +// several local macros defined below, and as soon as you understand them, +// you understand the whole library implementation. + +#ifndef BOOST_OPERATORS_HPP +#define BOOST_OPERATORS_HPP + +#include +#include +#include + +#if defined(__sgi) && !defined(__GNUC__) +# pragma set woff 1234 +#endif + +#if defined(BOOST_MSVC) +# pragma warning( disable : 4284 ) // complaint about return type of +#endif // operator-> not begin a UDT + +namespace boost { +namespace detail { + +template class empty_base { + +// Helmut Zeisel, empty base class optimization bug with GCC 3.0.0 +#if defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__==3 && __GNUC_MINOR__==0 && __GNU_PATCHLEVEL__==0 + bool dummy; +#endif + +}; + +} // namespace detail +} // namespace boost + +// In this section we supply the xxxx1 and xxxx2 forms of the operator +// templates, which are explicitly targeted at the 1-type-argument and +// 2-type-argument operator forms, respectively. Some compilers get confused +// when inline friend functions are overloaded in namespaces other than the +// global namespace. When BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE is defined, all of +// these templates must go in the global namespace. + +#ifndef BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE +namespace boost +{ +#endif + +// Basic operator classes (contributed by Dave Abrahams) ------------------// + +// Note that friend functions defined in a class are implicitly inline. +// See the C++ std, 11.4 [class.friend] paragraph 5 + +template > +struct less_than_comparable2 : B +{ + friend bool operator<=(const T& x, const U& y) { return !(x > y); } + friend bool operator>=(const T& x, const U& y) { return !(x < y); } + friend bool operator>(const U& x, const T& y) { return y < x; } + friend bool operator<(const U& x, const T& y) { return y > x; } + friend bool operator<=(const U& x, const T& y) { return !(y < x); } + friend bool operator>=(const U& x, const T& y) { return !(y > x); } +}; + +template > +struct less_than_comparable1 : B +{ + friend bool operator>(const T& x, const T& y) { return y < x; } + friend bool operator<=(const T& x, const T& y) { return !(y < x); } + friend bool operator>=(const T& x, const T& y) { return !(x < y); } +}; + +template > +struct equality_comparable2 : B +{ + friend bool operator==(const U& y, const T& x) { return x == y; } + friend bool operator!=(const U& y, const T& x) { return !(x == y); } + friend bool operator!=(const T& y, const U& x) { return !(y == x); } +}; + +template > +struct equality_comparable1 : B +{ + friend bool operator!=(const T& x, const T& y) { return !(x == y); } +}; + +// A macro which produces "name_2left" from "name". +#define BOOST_OPERATOR2_LEFT(name) name##2##_##left + +// NRVO-friendly implementation (contributed by Daniel Frey) ---------------// + +#if defined(BOOST_HAS_NRVO) || defined(BOOST_FORCE_SYMMETRIC_OPERATORS) + +// This is the optimal implementation for ISO/ANSI C++, +// but it requires the compiler to implement the NRVO. +// If the compiler has no NRVO, this is the best symmetric +// implementation available. + +#define BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( NAME, OP ) \ +template > \ +struct NAME##2 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const T& lhs, const U& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ + friend T operator OP( const U& lhs, const T& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( rhs ); nrv OP##= lhs; return nrv; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct NAME##1 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const T& lhs, const T& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ +}; + +#define BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_NON_COMMUTATIVE( NAME, OP ) \ +template > \ +struct NAME##2 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const T& lhs, const U& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct BOOST_OPERATOR2_LEFT(NAME) : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const U& lhs, const T& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct NAME##1 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const T& lhs, const T& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ +}; + +#else // defined(BOOST_HAS_NRVO) || defined(BOOST_FORCE_SYMMETRIC_OPERATORS) + +// For compilers without NRVO the following code is optimal, but not +// symmetric! Note that the implementation of +// BOOST_OPERATOR2_LEFT(NAME) only looks cool, but doesn't provide +// optimization opportunities to the compiler :) + +#define BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( NAME, OP ) \ +template > \ +struct NAME##2 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( T lhs, const U& rhs ) { return lhs OP##= rhs; } \ + friend T operator OP( const U& lhs, T rhs ) { return rhs OP##= lhs; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct NAME##1 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( T lhs, const T& rhs ) { return lhs OP##= rhs; } \ +}; + +#define BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_NON_COMMUTATIVE( NAME, OP ) \ +template > \ +struct NAME##2 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( T lhs, const U& rhs ) { return lhs OP##= rhs; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct BOOST_OPERATOR2_LEFT(NAME) : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const U& lhs, const T& rhs ) \ + { return T( lhs ) OP##= rhs; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct NAME##1 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( T lhs, const T& rhs ) { return lhs OP##= rhs; } \ +}; + +#endif // defined(BOOST_HAS_NRVO) || defined(BOOST_FORCE_SYMMETRIC_OPERATORS) + +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( multipliable, * ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( addable, + ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_NON_COMMUTATIVE( subtractable, - ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_NON_COMMUTATIVE( dividable, / ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_NON_COMMUTATIVE( modable, % ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( xorable, ^ ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( andable, & ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE( orable, | ) + +#undef BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_COMMUTATIVE +#undef BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR_NON_COMMUTATIVE +#undef BOOST_OPERATOR2_LEFT + +// incrementable and decrementable contributed by Jeremy Siek + +template > +struct incrementable : B +{ + friend T operator++(T& x, int) + { + incrementable_type nrv(x); + ++x; + return nrv; + } +private: // The use of this typedef works around a Borland bug + typedef T incrementable_type; +}; + +template > +struct decrementable : B +{ + friend T operator--(T& x, int) + { + decrementable_type nrv(x); + --x; + return nrv; + } +private: // The use of this typedef works around a Borland bug + typedef T decrementable_type; +}; + +// Iterator operator classes (contributed by Jeremy Siek) ------------------// + +template > +struct dereferenceable : B +{ + P operator->() const + { + return &*static_cast(*this); + } +}; + +template > +struct indexable : B +{ + R operator[](I n) const + { + return *(static_cast(*this) + n); + } +}; + +// More operator classes (contributed by Daryle Walker) --------------------// +// (NRVO-friendly implementation contributed by Daniel Frey) ---------------// + +#if defined(BOOST_HAS_NRVO) || defined(BOOST_FORCE_SYMMETRIC_OPERATORS) + +#define BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR( NAME, OP ) \ +template > \ +struct NAME##2 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const T& lhs, const U& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct NAME##1 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( const T& lhs, const T& rhs ) \ + { T nrv( lhs ); nrv OP##= rhs; return nrv; } \ +}; + +#else // defined(BOOST_HAS_NRVO) || defined(BOOST_FORCE_SYMMETRIC_OPERATORS) + +#define BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR( NAME, OP ) \ +template > \ +struct NAME##2 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( T lhs, const U& rhs ) { return lhs OP##= rhs; } \ +}; \ + \ +template > \ +struct NAME##1 : B \ +{ \ + friend T operator OP( T lhs, const T& rhs ) { return lhs OP##= rhs; } \ +}; + +#endif // defined(BOOST_HAS_NRVO) || defined(BOOST_FORCE_SYMMETRIC_OPERATORS) + +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR( left_shiftable, << ) +BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR( right_shiftable, >> ) + +#undef BOOST_BINARY_OPERATOR + +template > +struct equivalent2 : B +{ + friend bool operator==(const T& x, const U& y) + { + return !(x < y) && !(x > y); + } +}; + +template > +struct equivalent1 : B +{ + friend bool operator==(const T&x, const T&y) + { + return !(x < y) && !(y < x); + } +}; + +template > +struct partially_ordered2 : B +{ + friend bool operator<=(const T& x, const U& y) + { return (x < y) || (x == y); } + friend bool operator>=(const T& x, const U& y) + { return (x > y) || (x == y); } + friend bool operator>(const U& x, const T& y) + { return y < x; } + friend bool operator<(const U& x, const T& y) + { return y > x; } + friend bool operator<=(const U& x, const T& y) + { return (y > x) || (y == x); } + friend bool operator>=(const U& x, const T& y) + { return (y < x) || (y == x); } +}; + +template > +struct partially_ordered1 : B +{ + friend bool operator>(const T& x, const T& y) + { return y < x; } + friend bool operator<=(const T& x, const T& y) + { return (x < y) || (x == y); } + friend bool operator>=(const T& x, const T& y) + { return (y < x) || (x == y); } +}; + +// Combined operator classes (contributed by Daryle Walker) ----------------// + +template > +struct totally_ordered2 + : less_than_comparable2 > {}; + +template > +struct totally_ordered1 + : less_than_comparable1 > {}; + +template > +struct additive2 + : addable2 > {}; + +template > +struct additive1 + : addable1 > {}; + +template > +struct multiplicative2 + : multipliable2 > {}; + +template > +struct multiplicative1 + : multipliable1 > {}; + +template > +struct integer_multiplicative2 + : multiplicative2 > {}; + +template > +struct integer_multiplicative1 + : multiplicative1 > {}; + +template > +struct arithmetic2 + : additive2 > {}; + +template > +struct arithmetic1 + : additive1 > {}; + +template > +struct integer_arithmetic2 + : additive2 > {}; + +template > +struct integer_arithmetic1 + : additive1 > {}; + +template > +struct bitwise2 + : xorable2 > > {}; + +template > +struct bitwise1 + : xorable1 > > {}; + +template > +struct unit_steppable + : incrementable > {}; + +template > +struct shiftable2 + : left_shiftable2 > {}; + +template > +struct shiftable1 + : left_shiftable1 > {}; + +template > +struct ring_operators2 + : additive2 > > {}; + +template > +struct ring_operators1 + : additive1 > {}; + +template > +struct ordered_ring_operators2 + : ring_operators2 > {}; + +template > +struct ordered_ring_operators1 + : ring_operators1 > {}; + +template > +struct field_operators2 + : ring_operators2 > > {}; + +template > +struct field_operators1 + : ring_operators1 > {}; + +template > +struct ordered_field_operators2 + : field_operators2 > {}; + +template > +struct ordered_field_operators1 + : field_operators1 > {}; + +template > +struct euclidian_ring_operators2 + : ring_operators2 > > > > {}; + +template > +struct euclidian_ring_operators1 + : ring_operators1 > > {}; + +template > +struct ordered_euclidian_ring_operators2 + : totally_ordered2 > {}; + +template > +struct ordered_euclidian_ring_operators1 + : totally_ordered1 > {}; + +template > +struct input_iteratable + : equality_comparable1 > > {}; + +template > +struct output_iteratable + : incrementable {}; + +template > +struct forward_iteratable + : input_iteratable {}; + +template > +struct bidirectional_iteratable + : forward_iteratable > {}; + +// To avoid repeated derivation from equality_comparable, +// which is an indirect base class of bidirectional_iterable, +// random_access_iteratable must not be derived from totally_ordered1 +// but from less_than_comparable1 only. (Helmut Zeisel, 02-Dec-2001) +template > +struct random_access_iteratable + : bidirectional_iteratable > > > {}; + +#ifndef BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE +} // namespace boost +#endif // BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE + + +// BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1 .. BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4 - +// +// When BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE is defined we need a way to import an +// operator template into the boost namespace. BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1 is used +// for one-argument forms of operator templates; BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2 for +// two-argument forms. Note that these macros expect to be invoked from within +// boost. + +#ifndef BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE + + // The template is already in boost so we have nothing to do. +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4(template_name) +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE3(template_name) +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2(template_name) +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1(template_name) + +#else // BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE + +# ifndef BOOST_NO_USING_TEMPLATE + + // Bring the names in with a using-declaration + // to avoid stressing the compiler. +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4(template_name) using ::template_name; +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE3(template_name) using ::template_name; +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2(template_name) using ::template_name; +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1(template_name) using ::template_name; + +# else + + // Otherwise, because a Borland C++ 5.5 bug prevents a using declaration + // from working, we are forced to use inheritance for that compiler. +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4(template_name) \ + template > \ + struct template_name : ::template_name {}; + +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE3(template_name) \ + template > \ + struct template_name : ::template_name {}; + +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2(template_name) \ + template > \ + struct template_name : ::template_name {}; + +# define BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1(template_name) \ + template > \ + struct template_name : ::template_name {}; + +# endif // BOOST_NO_USING_TEMPLATE + +#endif // BOOST_NO_OPERATORS_IN_NAMESPACE + +// +// Here's where we put it all together, defining the xxxx forms of the templates +// in namespace boost. We also define specializations of is_chained_base<> for +// the xxxx, xxxx1, and xxxx2 templates, importing them into boost:: as +// necessary. +// +#ifndef BOOST_NO_TEMPLATE_PARTIAL_SPECIALIZATION + +// is_chained_base<> - a traits class used to distinguish whether an operator +// template argument is being used for base class chaining, or is specifying a +// 2nd argument type. + +namespace boost { +// A type parameter is used instead of a plain bool because Borland's compiler +// didn't cope well with the more obvious non-type template parameter. +namespace detail { + struct true_t {}; + struct false_t {}; +} // namespace detail + +// Unspecialized version assumes that most types are not being used for base +// class chaining. We specialize for the operator templates defined in this +// library. +template struct is_chained_base { + typedef ::boost::detail::false_t value; +}; + +} // namespace boost + +// Import a 4-type-argument operator template into boost (if necessary) and +// provide a specialization of 'is_chained_base<>' for it. +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE4(template_name4) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4(template_name4) \ + template \ + struct is_chained_base< ::boost::template_name4 > { \ + typedef ::boost::detail::true_t value; \ + }; + +// Import a 3-type-argument operator template into boost (if necessary) and +// provide a specialization of 'is_chained_base<>' for it. +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE3(template_name3) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE3(template_name3) \ + template \ + struct is_chained_base< ::boost::template_name3 > { \ + typedef ::boost::detail::true_t value; \ + }; + +// Import a 2-type-argument operator template into boost (if necessary) and +// provide a specialization of 'is_chained_base<>' for it. +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(template_name2) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2(template_name2) \ + template \ + struct is_chained_base< ::boost::template_name2 > { \ + typedef ::boost::detail::true_t value; \ + }; + +// Import a 1-type-argument operator template into boost (if necessary) and +// provide a specialization of 'is_chained_base<>' for it. +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(template_name1) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1(template_name1) \ + template \ + struct is_chained_base< ::boost::template_name1 > { \ + typedef ::boost::detail::true_t value; \ + }; + +// BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(template_name) defines template_name<> such that it +// can be used for specifying both 1-argument and 2-argument forms. Requires the +// existence of two previously defined class templates named '1' +// and '2' which must implement the corresponding 1- and 2- +// argument forms. +// +// The template type parameter O == is_chained_base::value is used to +// distinguish whether the 2nd argument to is being used for +// base class chaining from another boost operator template or is describing a +// 2nd operand type. O == true_t only when U is actually an another operator +// template from the library. Partial specialization is used to select an +// implementation in terms of either '1' or '2'. +// + +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(template_name) \ +template \ + ,class O = typename is_chained_base::value \ + > \ +struct template_name : template_name##2 {}; \ + \ +template \ +struct template_name \ + : template_name##1 {}; \ + \ +template \ +struct template_name \ + : template_name##1 {}; \ + \ +template \ +struct is_chained_base< ::boost::template_name > { \ + typedef ::boost::detail::true_t value; \ +}; \ + \ +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(template_name##2) \ +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(template_name##1) + + +#else // BOOST_NO_TEMPLATE_PARTIAL_SPECIALIZATION + +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE4(template_name4) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4(template_name4) +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE3(template_name3) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE3(template_name3) +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(template_name2) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2(template_name2) +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(template_name1) \ + BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1(template_name1) + + // In this case we can only assume that template_name<> is equivalent to the + // more commonly needed template_name1<> form. +# define BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(template_name) \ + template > \ + struct template_name : template_name##1 {}; + +#endif // BOOST_NO_TEMPLATE_PARTIAL_SPECIALIZATION + +namespace boost { + +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(less_than_comparable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(equality_comparable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(multipliable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(addable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(subtractable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(subtractable2_left) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(dividable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(dividable2_left) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(modable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(modable2_left) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(xorable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(andable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(orable) + +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(incrementable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(decrementable) + +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(dereferenceable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE3(indexable) + +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(left_shiftable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(right_shiftable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(equivalent) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(partially_ordered) + +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(totally_ordered) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(additive) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(multiplicative) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(integer_multiplicative) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(arithmetic) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(integer_arithmetic) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(bitwise) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(unit_steppable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(shiftable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(ring_operators) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(ordered_ring_operators) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(field_operators) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(ordered_field_operators) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(euclidian_ring_operators) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE(ordered_euclidian_ring_operators) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(input_iteratable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1(output_iteratable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(forward_iteratable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2(bidirectional_iteratable) +BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE4(random_access_iteratable) + +#undef BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE +#undef BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE4 +#undef BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE3 +#undef BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE2 +#undef BOOST_OPERATOR_TEMPLATE1 +#undef BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE1 +#undef BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE2 +#undef BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE3 +#undef BOOST_IMPORT_TEMPLATE4 + +// The following 'operators' classes can only be used portably if the derived class +// declares ALL of the required member operators. +template +struct operators2 + : totally_ordered2 > > {}; + +#ifndef BOOST_NO_TEMPLATE_PARTIAL_SPECIALIZATION +template +struct operators : operators2 {}; + +template struct operators +#else +template struct operators +#endif + : totally_ordered > > > {}; + +// Iterator helper classes (contributed by Jeremy Siek) -------------------// +// (Input and output iterator helpers contributed by Daryle Walker) -------// +// (Changed to use combined operator classes by Daryle Walker) ------------// +template +struct input_iterator_helper + : input_iteratable > {}; + +template +struct output_iterator_helper + : output_iteratable > +{ + T& operator*() { return static_cast(*this); } + T& operator++() { return static_cast(*this); } +}; + +template +struct forward_iterator_helper + : forward_iteratable > {}; + +template +struct bidirectional_iterator_helper + : bidirectional_iteratable > {}; + +template +struct random_access_iterator_helper + : random_access_iteratable > +{ + friend D requires_difference_operator(const T& x, const T& y) { + return x - y; + } +}; // random_access_iterator_helper + +} // namespace boost + +#if defined(__sgi) && !defined(__GNUC__) +#pragma reset woff 1234 +#endif + +#endif // BOOST_OPERATORS_HPP