boost/iterator/detail/enable_if.hpp
// (C) Copyright David Abrahams 2002.
// (C) Copyright Jeremy Siek 2002.
// (C) Copyright Thomas Witt 2002.
// 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)
#ifndef BOOST_ENABLE_IF_23022003THW_HPP
#define BOOST_ENABLE_IF_23022003THW_HPP
#include <boost/config.hpp>
#include <boost/iterator/detail/config_def.hpp>
#if defined(BOOST_NO_SFINAE) || defined(BOOST_NO_IS_CONVERTIBLE)
#include <boost/type_traits/type_identity.hpp>
#endif
//
// Boost iterators uses its own enable_if cause we need
// special semantics for deficient compilers.
// 23/02/03 thw
//
namespace boost
{
namespace iterators
{
//
// Base machinery for all kinds of enable if
//
template<bool>
struct enabled
{
template<typename T>
struct base
{
typedef T type;
};
};
//
// For compilers that don't support "Substitution Failure Is Not An Error"
// enable_if falls back to always enabled. See comments
// on operator implementation for consequences.
//
template<>
struct enabled<false>
{
template<typename T>
struct base
{
#ifdef BOOST_NO_SFINAE
typedef T type;
// This way to do it would give a nice error message containing
// invalid overload, but has the big disadvantage that
// there is no reference to user code in the error message.
//
// struct invalid_overload;
// typedef invalid_overload type;
//
#endif
};
};
template <class Cond,
class Return>
struct enable_if
# if !defined(BOOST_NO_SFINAE) && !defined(BOOST_NO_IS_CONVERTIBLE)
: enabled<(Cond::value)>::template base<Return>
# else
: boost::type_identity<Return>
# endif
{
};
} // namespace iterators
} // namespace boost
#include <boost/iterator/detail/config_undef.hpp>
#endif // BOOST_ENABLE_IF_23022003THW_HPP