This paper assumes that the reader is familar with N4475 "Default comparisons (R2)" by Bjarne Stroustrup. In particular, default comparisons are assumed to be implicit (i.e. require no extra syntax to be available).
Given aim 3, we're 30+ years late in mandating the ideal world, which is too late. In particular, that means we cannot enforce the important principle that x==y appearing in different corners of the source code has the same semantics everywhere. We can, however, make sure that the default (if used) has the same semantics everywhere.
The following rules reflect the aims above. Note that they change the meaning of existing (arguably broken) code, as highlighted in the examples below. These rules are given in informal language; for a precise wording of the rules, refer to the "wording" section below.
First, we modify the existing rules for overload resolution of the =, equality, and relational operators as well as copy construction. This is intended to prevent slicing (aim 4, aim 6). We allow for benign slicing when the derived class adds no data members (aim 3), which is needed to continue to support tag dispatch for standard library algorithms.
R1: For a class B and a class D derived from B, attempting to bind a
const B&
parameter of the copy constructor or of the
operator=, equality, or relational functions to a value of type D
makes overload resolution fail, unless all other (if any) base classes
of D are empty and the definition of D declares no data members and no
virtual functions.
Second, we introduce declarations (but not definitions) of the default
comparisons for each class that is defined (aim 1). Note that a class
template specialization is a class that is defined when the class
template is instantiated or explicitly specialized. A friend
declaration is only visible to argument-dependent lookup, thus we can
only find it for function calls, but not for taking the address.
R2: For each class that is defined, equality (5.10 expr.eq) and relational (5.9 expr.rel) operator functions according to the patternThird, we allow a user declaration of one of those operator functions to hide the implicitly-declared one (aim 3):bool operator op(const C&, const C&);are implicitly declared (unless there was a preceding user declaration with a similar signature), but not yet defined. (A member declaration of op is transformed into the equivalent non-member form by introducing the implicit object parameter (13.3.1 over.match.funcs) for the check.) The declaration is as-if by a friend declaration immediately before the closing brace of the class definition.
R3: A user-declared comparison function hides the corresponding implicitly-declared one for class C with a similar signature (if any). Hiding means that if both appear in a lookup set, only the user-declared comparison function is considered in overload resolution.Fourth, the definition of a default comparison (aim 2, aim 6):
R4: An implicitly-declared comparison function for a class C is defined if it is odr-used (3.2 basic.def.odr). It performs subobject decomposition and then subobject comparisons (see "wording" below). The subobject comparisons are performed in the context of class C as-if immediately before the closing brace of the class definition. If subobject comparison would be ill-formed, the comparison is defined as deleted.Fifth, using both a default comparison and the corresponding user-declared comparison is a syntax error (aim 2):
R5: If an expression or the definition of a default comparison uses a default comparison, but would use a user-declared comparison if the former appeared later in the translation unit, the program is ill-formed. No diagnostic is required if the use and the competing declaration are in different translation units.Sixth, do not apply user-defined conversions for a homogenous comparison:
R6: In a comparison applied to operands of the same type, no user-declared conversions are considered when converting the operands to the parameter types of the comparison operator function.Seventh, define "similar signature". This could be extended to (some kinds of) function templates if desired.
Two operator functions have a similar signature if theyNote that the wording below takes a slightly different approach by reusing the intermediate results of overload resolution to determine whether a default comparison should be generated.
- have the same name and,
- given a class type C and the types T1 and T2 of corresponding parameters, each of T1 and T2 is either C or reference to cv C
struct B { int x; }; B b; bool result = B() == b; // ok, default== for B
struct B { int x; }; struct D : B { int y; }; B b1, b2; D d1, d2; B b3(b1); // ok, direct-initialization B b4(d1); // error, violates R1 for the implicit copy constructor of B B b5(static_cast<B&>(d1)); // ok, binds parameter of copy constructor to "lvalue of type B" D d3(d1); // ok, direct-initialization D d4(b1); // error, can't convert B to D int f(B); int i1 = f(b1); // ok, copy-initialization int i2 = f(d1); // error, violates R1 for the implicit copy int i3 = f(static_cast<B&>(d1)); // ok, binds parameter of copy constructor to "lvalue of type B" int g(const B&); int i4 = g(b1), // ok, direct reference binding int i5 = g(d1); // ok, direct reference binding to B subobject of d1 void h() { b2 = b1; // ok, copy-assignment b2 = d1; // error, violates R1 for the implicit copy-assignment of B b2 = static_cast<B&>(d1); // ok, binds parameter of copy-assignment operator to "lvalue of type B" d2 = d1; // ok, copy-assignment d2 = b1; // error, can't convert B to D } bool r1 = b1 == b2; // ok, default== for B bool r2 = d1 == d2; // ok, default== for D bool r3 = b1 == d2; // error: violates R1 for the default== for B
struct B { B(const B&); // #1 B& operator=(const B&); // #2 int x; }; bool operator==(const B&, const B&); struct D : B { int y; }; B b1, b2; D d1, d2; B b3(b1); // ok, direct-initialization B b4(d1); // error, violates R1 for the call to #1 D d3(d1); // ok, direct-initialization, calls #1 for copying the B subobject of d1 D d4(b1); // error, can't convert B to D int f(B); int i1 = f(b1); // ok, copy-initialization int i2 = f(d1); // error, violates R1 for the implicit copy int g(const B&); int i3 = g(b1), // ok, direct reference binding int i4 = g(d1); // ok, direct reference binding to B subobject of d1 void h() { b2 = b1; // ok, copy-assignment b2 = d1; // error, violates R1 for the call to #2 d2 = d1; // ok, copy-assignment d2 = b1; // error, can't convert B to D } bool r1 = b1 == b2; // ok, operator== for B bool r2 = d1 == d2; // ok, default== for D, invokes operator== for B subobjects bool r3 = b1 == d2; // error: violates R1 for user-declared operator==
struct B { int x; }
struct D : B { }; // no additional subobjects vs. B
B b1, b2;
D d1, d2;
B b3(b1); // ok, direct-initialization
B b4(d1); // ok, slicing is harmless and permitted
D d3(d1); // ok, direct-initialization
D d4(b1); // error, can't convert B to D
int f(B);
int i1 = f(b1); // ok, copy-initialization
int i2 = f(d1); // ok, slicing is harmless and permitted
int g(const B&);
int i4 = g(b1), // ok, direct reference binding
int i5 = g(d1); // ok, direct reference binding to B subobject of d1
void h() {
b2 = b1; // ok, copy-assignment
b2 = d1; // ok, slicing is harmless and permitted
d2 = d1; // ok, copy-assignment
d2 = b1; // error, can't convert B to D
}
bool r1 = b1 == b2; // ok, default== for B
bool r2 = d1 == d2; // ok, default== for D
bool r3 = b1 == d2; // ok, default== for B (see R2; slicing allowed by R1)
struct S { bool operator==(const S&); // #1; note: non-const (user oversight) }; S s; bool b1 = s == s; // calls #1 bool b2 = S() == S(); // error, can't call #1 and no default== struct S2 { }; bool operator==(const S2&, const S2&); // #2 bool b3 = S2() == S2(); // calls #2 struct S3 { }; S operator==(const S3&, S3&); // #3 (strange) S3 s3; S b4 = s3 == s3; // calls #3; no default== S b5 = S3() == S3(); // error, can't call #3 and no default==
struct S { }; namespace N { bool operator==(const S&, const S&); // #1 bool operator==(const S&, S&); // #2 bool b = S() == S(); // calls #1 (note: some prefer default== or error) S s; bool b2 = S() == s; // calls #2 (note: some prefer default== or error) }
struct S { };
bool b1 = S() == S(); // ok, use default==
namespace N {
bool operator==(S,S); // #1
bool b2 = S() == S(); // ok, use N::operator==
}
struct S { }; // #1 struct S2 { S s; }; namespace N { bool operator==(S,S); // #2 bool b = S2() == S2(); // #3 error }For #3, we use the default== on S2. Its definition uses the default== on S introduced at #1, but that violates R5 at #2.
struct S {
operator int() const;
};
bool b = S() == S(); // ok, default== for S
struct C { }; template<class T> bool operator==(const T&, const T&); bool b = C() == C(); // ok, use operator== template
template<class T> class S { }; template<class T> bool operator==(const S<T>&, const S<T>&); S<int> s; bool b = s == s; // use user-declared operator==template<class T> class S2 { friend bool operator==(const S2<T>&, const S2<T>&) { ... } }; S<int> s; bool b2 = s == s; // uses user-declared operator==
Case 1: User-written == appears as a member of C, or in the same
namespace as C and mentions C specifically. All of these cases call
the user-written ==. Varying the parameter types between C, const C&,
and C& does not change the outcome, except that the rules preventing
binding prvalues to lvalue references remain in force.
// case 1a: obvious case
struct C1 {
bool operator==(const C1&) const;
};
bool b = C1() == C1(); // uses user-declared == for C1
// case 1b: obvious case, non-member
struct C2 { };
bool operator==(const C2&, const C2&);
bool b = C2() == C2(); // uses user-declared == for C2
// case 1c: class template member
template<class T>
struct C3 {
bool operator==(const C3&) const;
};
bool b = C3() == C3(); // uses user-declared == for C3
// case 1d: function template for a class template
template<class T> struct C4 { };
template<class T> bool operator==(const C4<T>&, const C4<T>&);
bool b = C4() == C4(); // uses user-declared == for C4
// case 2a: fully general template
struct C5 { };
template<class T> bool operator==(const T&, const T&);
C5 c5;
bool b = C5() == C5(); // calls operator function template
// case 2b: same with concept
struct C6 { };
template<My_concept T> bool operator==(const T&, const T&);
bool b = C6() == C6(); // calls operator function template
// case 2c: conversion
struct C7 { };
struct X { X(const C7&){} }; // convertible from C7
bool operator==(const X&, const X&);
bool b = C7() == C7(); // uses default== for C7
struct S { int i = 0; }; bool operator==(const S&, const S&) { return true; } int f() { S() != S(); // well-formed, yields false }
struct S { int a[3]; }
will acquire generated
comparison functions, but top-level (standalone) int[3]
(i.e. an array not wrapped in a struct) will not.struct A { }; void operator==(const A&, const A&); // yes void operator==(const A&, int); // no void operator==(A&, const A&); // yes void operator==(A&&, volatile A&); // no void operator==(const volatile A&&, const A&); // no void operator==(A, const A&); // yes template<class T> void operator==(const T&, A); // yes template<class T> void operator==(const T&, const T&); // yes template<class T> void operator==(T&&, T&&); // no
struct A { int x, y; } a; namespace N { void *operator<(A, A); auto q = a > a; }Consistent with aim 2, we cannot use N::operator<. This is ill-formed to avoid silent surprises.
struct S { int x; }; bool operator==(const S&, const S&); S s; bool b = s < s; // error
A type cv T supports comparison by subobject if T is an array type, or is a non-union class type that satisfies the following constraints:Change in 9 [class] paragraph 7 bullet 6:T supports operator op if overload resolution (13.3.1.2 [over.match.oper]) finds a viable function for the expression
- T has no virtual base class (clause 10 [class.derived]),
- T has no virtual member function (10.3 [class.virtual]),
- T has no direct mutable member (7.1.1 [dcl.stc]),
- T has no direct non-static data member of pointer type (9.2 [class.mem]), and
- T has no user-provided or deleted copy/move constructor or assignment operator (12.8 [class.copy]).
x op y
, where x and y are lvalues of type T.T supports equality comparison by subobject if T supports comparison by subobject and does not support operator== and operator!=.
T supports relational comparison by subobject if T supports equality comparison by subobject and does not support operator <, operator <=, operator >, and operator >=.
Change in 9.2 [class.mem] paragraph 1:
- ...
- has all non-static data members and bit-fields in the class and its base classes
first declared inas direct members of the same class, and- ...
The member-specification in a class definition declares the full set of members of the class; no member can be added elsewhere. A direct member of a class is a member of that class that was first declared within the class's member-specification. ...Add a new section 9.10 [class.oper]:
9.10 Operators [class.oper]Add a paragraph before 13.3.1.2 [over.match.oper] paragraph 5:[ Note: This section specifies the meaning of relational (5.9 [expr.rel]) or equality (5.10 [expr.eq]) operators applied to values of class or array type. ]
Comparing for equality two objects x and y that have the same class or array type T (ignoring cv-qualification) is defined as follows:
- A sequence of corresponding subobjects of x and y is formed by starting with a sequence comprising x corresponding to y, and repeatedly replacing each element whose type supports equality comparison by subobject (3.9.2 [basic.compound]) with a sequence of the corresponding subobjects of the direct base classes and direct members of that type, in order of declaration or order of increasing array subscript.
- For each element in the sequence of corresponding subobjects, the corresponding subobjects are compared using ==. If this comparison, when contextually converted to
bool
, yields false, no further subobjects are compared, andx == y
yields false andx != y
yields true. If all such comparisons yield true, thenx == y
yields true andx != y
yields false.Comparing two objects x and y that have the same class or array type T (ignoring cv-qualification) is defined as follows:
When comparing corresponding subobjects using == or <, if the initial x corresponding y is compared, the context for the use of the operator is where the comparison appears, and if a viable function is not a member of T or a member of the innermost enclosing namespace of T, the program is ill-formed. Otherwise, the context for the use of the operator is immediately before the closing } of the class definition of T. [ Note: The context determines operator function lookup and access control. ]
- For x > y, the result is y < x. For x >= y, the result is y <= x.
- A sequence of corresponding subobjects of x and y is formed by starting with a sequence comprising x corresponding to y, and repeatedly replacing each element whose type supports relational comparison by subobject (3.9.2 [basic.compound]) with a sequence of the corresponding subobjects of the direct base classes and direct members of that type, in order of declaration or order of increasing array subscript.
- For each element in the sequence of corresponding subobjects, the corresponding subobjects are compared using ==. If this comparison, when contextually converted to bool, yields false for the first time, that element is the first differing one. If the final element is reached for a < comparison, that element is the first differing one, and is not compared with ==. Otherwise, if all such comparisons yield true, there is no first differing element.
- If there is no first differing element, the result of the <= comparison is true. Otherwise, the corresponding subobjects of the first differing element are compared using <. The result of this comparison, when contextually converted to bool, is the result of the overall comparison.
[ Example:
struct B { int i = 0; }; struct S : B { int j = 1; }; struct T : S { bool operator>(T) = delete; }; void f() { B b; S s1, s2; s2.j = 2; s1 == s1; // yields true s1 != s2; // yields true s1 < s1; // yields false s1 < s2; // yields true s1 == b; // error: not the same class type T() == T(); // yields true T() < T(); // error: operator> is user-declared }-- end example ]
For a relational (5.9 [expr.rel]) or equality (5.10 [expr.eq]) operator where both operands are of the same class type, no user-defined conversions are applied to any of the operands.Add a paragraph after 13.3.1.2 [over.match.oper] paragraph 7:For all other operators, no such restrictions apply.
If overload resolution yields no viable function (13.3.2 [over.match.viable]) for a relational (5.9 [expr.rel]) or equality (5.10 [expr.eq]) operator and the operands are of the same class type T (ignoring cv-qualification), then:Change in 13.3.2 [over.match.viable] paragraph 3:If a comparison operator is treated as a built-in operator in a context whose nearest enclosing namespace is N, and a comparison with the same operator and the same operand types in another context whose nearest enclosing namespace is also N is not treated as a built-in operator, the program is ill-formed. No diagnostic is required if the two comparisons appear in different translation units. [ Example:
- If the operator is == and T does not support equality comparison by subobject, the program is ill-formed.
- If the operator is < and T does not support relational comparison by subobject, the program is ill-formed.
- Otherwise, the operator is treated as a built-in operator and interpreted according to 9.10 [class.oper].
struct S { }; bool b = S() == S(); // built-in == bool operator==(const S&, const S&); S s; bool b2 = s == s; // error: not using built-in ==-- end example ]
Second, for F to be a viable function, there shall exist for each argument an implicit conversion sequence (13.3.3.1) that converts that argument to the corresponding parameter of F. If the parameter has reference type, the implicit conversion sequence includes the operation of binding the reference, and the fact that an lvalue reference to non-const cannot be bound to an rvalue and that an rvalue reference cannot be bound to an lvalue can affect the viability of the function (see 13.3.3.1.4). If F is aAdd a new section to Annex C:an implicit conversion sequence shall not bind a parameter of type "reference to cv B" to an argument of class type D derived from B, unless all non-static data members of D are inherited from B and D has no virtual functions and no virtual base classes.
- copy constructor (12.8 [class.copy]),
- copy assignment operator function, or
- relational (5.9 [expr.rel]) or equality (5.10 [expr.eq]) operator function,
C.4.4 Clause 13: Overloading [diff.cpp14.over]13.3.1.2 [over.match.oper]
Change: Disallow derived-to-base and user-defined conversions for comparison operators
Rationale: Avoid a common source of errors.
Effect on original feature: Valid C++ 2014 code may fail to compile or change meaning in this International Standard:
struct B { }; bool operator==(const B&, const B&); struct D : B { int *p; }; bool b1 = D() == B(); // ill-formed; previously well-formed bool b2 = D() == D(); // ill-formed; previously well-formed struct S { operator int() const; int * p; }; bool b3 = S() == S(); // ill-formed; previously well-formed13.3.2 [over.match.viable]
Change: Disallow derived-to-base conversions for copy construction and copy assignment ("slicing").
Rationale: Avoid a common source of errors.
Effect on original feature: Valid C++ 2014 code may fail to compile or change meaning in this International Standard:
struct B { }; struct D : B { int x = 0; }; D d; B b1 = d; // ill-formed; previously well-formed B b2 = static_cast<const B&>(d); // well-formed