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std.variant

This module implements a discriminated union type (a.k.a. tagged union, algebraic type). Such types are useful for type-uniform binary interfaces, interfacing with scripting languages, and comfortable exploratory programming.

Synopsis:

Variant a; // Must assign before use, otherwise exception ensues
// Initialize with an integer; make the type int
Variant b = 42;
assert(b.type == typeid(int));
// Peek at the value
assert(b.peek!(int) !is null && *b.peek!(int) == 42);
// Automatically convert per language rules
auto x = b.get!(real);
// Assign any other type, including other variants
a = b;
a = 3.14;
assert(a.type == typeid(double));
// Implicit conversions work just as with built-in types
assert(a < b);
// Check for convertibility
assert(!a.convertsTo!(int)); // double not convertible to int
// Strings and all other arrays are supported
a = "now I'm a string";
assert(a == "now I'm a string");
a = new int[42]; // can also assign arrays
assert(a.length == 42);
a[5] = 7;
assert(a[5] == 7);
// Can also assign class values
class Foo {}
auto foo = new Foo;
a = foo;
assert(*a.peek!(Foo) == foo); // and full type information is preserved

A Variant object can hold a value of any type, with very few restrictions (such as shared types and noncopyable types). Setting the value is as immediate as assigning to the Variant object. To read back the value of the appropriate type T, use the get!T call. To query whether a Variant currently holds a value of type T, use peek!T. To fetch the exact type currently held, call type, which returns the TypeInfo of the current value.

In addition to Variant, this module also defines the Algebraic type constructor. Unlike Variant, Algebraic only allows a finite set of types, which are specified in the instantiation (e.g. Algebraic!(int, string) may only hold an int or a string).

Credits: Reviewed by Brad Roberts. Daniel Keep provided a detailed code review prompting the following improvements: (1) better support for arrays; (2) support for associative arrays; (3) friendlier behavior towards the garbage collector.

License:
Authors:

Source: std/variant.d

template maxSize(T...)
Gives the sizeof the largest type given.
struct VariantN(size_t maxDataSize, AllowedTypesParam...);
VariantN is a back-end type seldom used directly by user code. Two commonly-used types using VariantN as back-end are:
  1. Algebraic: A closed discriminated union with a limited type universe (e.g., Algebraic!(int, double, string) only accepts these three types and rejects anything else).
  2. Variant: An open discriminated union allowing an unbounded set of types. If any of the types in the Variant are larger than the largest built-in type, they will automatically be boxed. This means that even large types will only be the size of a pointer within the Variant, but this also implies some overhead. Variant can accommodate all primitive types and all user-defined types.

Both Algebraic and Variant share VariantN's interface. (See their respective documentations below.)

VariantN is a discriminated union type parameterized with the largest size of the types stored (maxDataSize) and with the list of allowed types (AllowedTypes). If the list is empty, then any type up of size up to maxDataSize (rounded up for alignment) can be stored in a VariantN object without being boxed (types larger than this will be boxed).
alias AllowedTypes = This2Variant!(VariantN, AllowedTypesParam);
The list of allowed types. If empty, any type is allowed.
enum bool allowed(T);
Tells whether a type T is statically allowed for storage inside a VariantN object by looking T up in AllowedTypes.
this(T)(T value);
Constructs a VariantN value given an argument of a generic type. Statically rejects disallowed types.
this(T : VariantN!(tsize, Types), size_t tsize, Types...)(T value) if (!is(T : VariantN) && Types.length > 0 && allSatisfy!(allowed, Types));
Allows assignment from a subset algebraic type
VariantN opAssign(T)(T rhs);
Assigns a VariantN from a generic argument. Statically rejects disallowed types.
const pure nothrow @property bool hasValue();
Returns true if and only if the VariantN object holds a valid value (has been initialized with, or assigned from, a valid value).
Examples:
Variant a;
assert(!a.hasValue);
Variant b;
a = b;
assert(!a.hasValue); // still no value
a = 5;
assert(a.hasValue);
inout @property inout(T)* peek(T)();
If the VariantN object holds a value of the exact type T, returns a pointer to that value. Otherwise, returns null. In cases where T is statically disallowed, peek will not compile.
Examples:
Variant a = 5;
auto b = a.peek!(int);
assert(b !is null);
*b = 6;
assert(a == 6);
const nothrow @property @trusted TypeInfo type();
Returns the typeid of the currently held value.
const @property bool convertsTo(T)();
Returns true if and only if the VariantN object holds an object implicitly convertible to type U. Implicit convertibility is defined as per ImplicitConversionTargets.
inout @property inout(T) get(T)();
inout @property auto get(uint index)() if (index < AllowedTypes.length);
Returns the value stored in the VariantN object, either by specifying the needed type or the index in the list of allowed types. The latter overload only applies to bounded variants (e.g. Algebraic).
Parameters:
T The requested type. The currently stored value must implicitly convert to the requested type, in fact DecayStaticToDynamicArray!T. If an implicit conversion is not possible, throws a VariantException.
index The index of the type among AllowedTypesParam, zero-based.
@property T coerce(T)();
Returns the value stored in the VariantN object, explicitly converted (coerced) to the requested type T. If T is a string type, the value is formatted as a string. If the VariantN object is a string, a parse of the string to type T is attempted. If a conversion is not possible, throws a VariantException.
string toString();
Formats the stored value as a string.
const bool opEquals(T)(auto ref T rhs);
Comparison for equality used by the "==" and "!=" operators.
int opCmp(T)(T rhs);
Ordering comparison used by the "<", "<=", ">", and ">=" operators. In case comparison is not sensible between the held value and rhs, an exception is thrown.
const nothrow @safe size_t toHash();
Computes the hash of the held value.
VariantN opAdd(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opSub(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opMul(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opDiv(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opMod(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opAnd(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opOr(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opXor(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opShl(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opShr(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opUShr(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opCat(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opAddAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opSubAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opMulAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opDivAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opModAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opAndAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opOrAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opXorAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opShlAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opShrAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opUShrAssign(T)(T rhs);
VariantN opCatAssign(T)(T rhs);
Arithmetic between VariantN objects and numeric values. All arithmetic operations return a VariantN object typed depending on the types of both values involved. The conversion rules mimic D's built-in rules for arithmetic conversions.
Variant opIndex(K)(K i);
Variant opIndexAssign(T, N)(T value, N i);
Array and associative array operations. If a VariantN contains an (associative) array, it can be indexed into. Otherwise, an exception is thrown.
Examples:
auto a = Variant(new int[10]);
a[5] = 42;
assert(a[5] == 42);
int[int] hash = [ 42:24 ];
a = hash;
assert(a[42] == 24);
Examples:
Caveat: Due to limitations in current language, read-modify-write operations op= will not work properly:
Variant a = new int[10];
a[5] = 42;
a[5] += 8;
//assert(a[5] == 50); // will fail, a[5] is still 42
@property size_t length();
If the VariantN contains an (associative) array, returns the length of that array. Otherwise, throws an exception.
int opApply(Delegate)(scope Delegate dg) if (is(Delegate == delegate));
If the VariantN contains an array, applies dg to each element of the array in turn. Otherwise, throws an exception.
template Algebraic(T...)
Algebraic data type restricted to a closed set of possible types. It's an alias for a VariantN with an appropriately-constructed maximum size. Algebraic is useful when it is desirable to restrict what a discriminated type could hold to the end of defining simpler and more efficient manipulation.
Examples:
auto v = Algebraic!(int, double, string)(5);
assert(v.peek!(int));
v = 3.14;
assert(v.peek!(double));
// auto x = v.peek!(long); // won't compile, type long not allowed
// v = '1'; // won't compile, type char not allowed
Examples:

Self-Referential Types

A useful and popular use of algebraic data structures is for defining self-referential data structures, i.e. structures that embed references to values of their own type within.

This is achieved with Algebraic by using This as a placeholder whenever a reference to the type being defined is needed. The Algebraic instantiation will perform alpha renaming on its constituent types, replacing This with the self-referenced type. The structure of the type involving This may be arbitrarily complex.
// A tree is either a leaf or a branch of two other trees
alias Tree(Leaf) = Algebraic!(Leaf, Tuple!(This*, This*));
Tree!int tree = tuple(new Tree!int(42), new Tree!int(43));
Tree!int* right = tree.get!1[1];
assert(*right == 43);

// An object is a double, a string, or a hash of objects
alias Obj = Algebraic!(double, string, This[string]);
Obj obj = "hello";
assert(obj.get!1 == "hello");
obj = 42.0;
assert(obj.get!0 == 42);
obj = ["customer": Obj("John"), "paid": Obj(23.95)];
assert(obj.get!2["customer"] == "John");
alias Variant = VariantN!32LU.VariantN;
Variant is an alias for VariantN instantiated with the largest of creal, char[], and void delegate(). This ensures that Variant is large enough to hold all of D's predefined types unboxed, including all numeric types, pointers, delegates, and class references. You may want to use VariantN directly with a different maximum size either for storing larger types unboxed, or for saving memory.
Variant[] variantArray(T...)(T args);
Returns an array of variants constructed from args.
This is by design. During construction the Variant needs static type information about the type being held, so as to store a pointer to function for fast retrieval.
Examples:
auto a = variantArray(1, 3.14, "Hi!");
assert(a[1] == 3.14);
auto b = Variant(a); // variant array as variant
assert(b[1] == 3.14);
Examples:
Code that needs functionality similar to the boxArray function in the std.boxer module can achieve it like this:
/* old
Box[] fun(...)
{
    // ...
    return boxArray(_arguments, _argptr);
}
*/
// new
Variant[] fun(T...)(T args)
{
    // ...
    return variantArray(args);
}
class VariantException: object.Exception;
/** Thrown in three cases:
  1. An uninitialized Variant is used in any way except assignment and hasValue;
  2. A get or coerce is attempted with an incompatible target type;
  3. A comparison between Variant objects of incompatible types is attempted.
TypeInfo source;
The source type in the conversion or comparison
TypeInfo target;
The target type in the conversion or comparison
template visit(Handler...) if (Handler.length > 0)
Applies a delegate or function to the given Algebraic depending on the held type, ensuring that all types are handled by the visiting functions.
The delegate or function having the currently held value as parameter is called with variant's current value. Visiting handlers are passed in the template parameter list. It is statically ensured that all types of variant are handled across all handlers. visit allows delegates and static functions to be passed as parameters.

If a function without parameters is specified, this function is called when variant doesn't hold a value. Exactly one parameter-less function is allowed.

Duplicate overloads matching the same type in one of the visitors are disallowed.
Returns:
The return type of visit is deduced from the visiting functions and must be the same across all overloads.
Throws:
If no parameter-less, error function is specified: VariantException if variant doesn't hold a value.
Examples:
Algebraic!(int, string) variant;

variant = 10;
assert(variant.visit!((string s) => cast(int)s.length,
                      (int i)    => i)()
                      == 10);
variant = "string";
assert(variant.visit!((int i) => i,
                      (string s) => cast(int)s.length)()
                      == 6);

// Error function usage
Algebraic!(int, string) emptyVar;
auto rslt = emptyVar.visit!((string s) => cast(int)s.length,
                      (int i)    => i,
                      () => -1)();
assert(rslt == -1);
template tryVisit(Handler...) if (Handler.length > 0)
Behaves as visit but doesn't enforce that all types are handled by the visiting functions.
If a parameter-less function is specified it is called when either variant doesn't hold a value or holds a type which isn't handled by the visiting functions.
Returns:
The return type of tryVisit is deduced from the visiting functions and must be the same across all overloads.
Throws:
If no parameter-less, error function is specified: VariantException if variant doesn't hold a value or if variant holds a value which isn't handled by the visiting functions.
Examples:
Algebraic!(int, string) variant;

variant = 10;
auto which = -1;
variant.tryVisit!((int i) { which = 0; })();
assert(which == 0);

// Error function usage
variant = "test";
variant.tryVisit!((int i) { which = 0; },
                  ()      { which = -100; })();
assert(which == -100);