Template std.sumtype.match
Calls a type-appropriate function with the value held in a [SumType].
						
				template match(handlers...)
				;
						
					
				For each possible type the [SumType] can hold, the given handlers are checked, in order, to see whether they accept a single argument of that type. The first one that does is chosen as the match for that type. (Note that the first match may not always be the most exact match. See ["Avoiding unintentional matches"](#avoiding-unintentional-matches) for one common pitfall.)
Every type must have a matching handler, and every handler must match at least one type. This is enforced at compile time.
 Handlers may be functions, delegates, or objects with opCall overloads. If
 a function with more than one overload is given as a handler, all of the
 overloads are considered as potential matches.
Templated handlers are also accepted, and will match any type for which they can be [implicitly instantiated](https://dlang.org/glossary.html#ifti). See ["Introspection-based matching"](#introspection-based-matching) for an example of templated handler usage.
If multiple [SumType]s are passed to match, their values are passed to the handlers as separate arguments, and matching is done for each possible combination of value types. See ["Multiple dispatch"](#multiple-dispatch) for an example.
Contained Functions
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| match | The actual matchfunction. | 
Returns
The value returned from the handler that matches the currently-held type.
See Also
Example
Avoiding unintentional matches
Sometimes, implicit conversions may cause a handler to match more types than intended. The example below shows two solutions to this problem.
alias Number = SumType!(double, int);
Number x;
// Problem: because int implicitly converts to double, the double
// handler is used for both types, and the int handler never matches.
assert(!__traits(compiles,
    xExample
Multiple dispatch
 Pattern matching can be performed on multiple SumTypes at once by passing
 handlers with multiple arguments. This usually leads to more concise code
 than using nested calls to match, as show below.
struct Point2D { double x, y; }
struct Point3D { double x, y, z; }
alias Point = SumType!(Point2D, Point3D);
version (none)
{
    // This function works, but the code is ugly and repetitive.
    // It uses three separate calls to match!
    @safe pure nothrow @nogc
    bool sameDimensions(Point p1, Point p2)
    {
        return p1Authors
Paul Backus
License
Boost License 1.0