123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103 |
- /*!
- @file
- Forward declares `boost::hana::Product`.
- Copyright Louis Dionne 2013-2022
- Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0.
- (See accompanying file LICENSE.md or copy at http://boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
- */
- #ifndef BOOST_HANA_FWD_CONCEPT_PRODUCT_HPP
- #define BOOST_HANA_FWD_CONCEPT_PRODUCT_HPP
- #include <boost/hana/config.hpp>
- namespace boost { namespace hana {
- //! @ingroup group-concepts
- //! @defgroup group-Product Product
- //! Represents types that are generic containers of two elements.
- //!
- //! This concept basically represents types that are like `std::pair`.
- //! The motivation for making such a precise concept is similar to the
- //! motivation behind the `Sequence` concept; there are many different
- //! implementations of `std::pair` in different libraries, and we would
- //! like to manipulate any of them generically.
- //!
- //! Since a `Product` is basically a pair, it is unsurprising that the
- //! operations provided by this concept are getting the first and second
- //! element of a pair, creating a pair from two elements and other
- //! simmilar operations.
- //!
- //! @note
- //! Mathematically, this concept represents types that are category
- //! theoretical [products][1]. This is also where the name comes
- //! from.
- //!
- //!
- //! Minimal complete definition
- //! ---------------------------
- //! `first`, `second` and `make`
- //!
- //! `first` and `second` must obviously return the first and the second
- //! element of the pair, respectively. `make` must take two arguments `x`
- //! and `y` representing the first and the second element of the pair,
- //! and return a pair `p` such that `first(p) == x` and `second(p) == y`.
- //! @include example/product/make.cpp
- //!
- //!
- //! Laws
- //! ----
- //! For a model `P` of `Product`, the following laws must be satisfied.
- //! For every data types `X` and `Y`, there must be a unique function
- //! @f$ \mathtt{make} : X \times Y \to P @f$ such that for every `x`, `y`,
- //! @code
- //! x == first(make<P>(x, y))
- //! y == second(make<P>(x, y))
- //! @endcode
- //!
- //! @note
- //! This law is less general than the universal property typically used to
- //! define category theoretical products, but it is vastly enough for what
- //! we need.
- //!
- //! This is basically saying that a `Product` must be the most general
- //! object able to contain a pair of objects `(P1, P2)`, but nothing
- //! more. Since the categorical product is defined by a universal
- //! property, all the models of this concept are isomorphic, and
- //! the isomorphism is unique. In other words, there is one and only
- //! one way to convert one `Product` to another.
- //!
- //! Another property that must be satisfied by `first` and `second` is
- //! that of @ref move-independence, which ensures that we can optimally
- //! decompose a `Product` into its two members without making redundant
- //! copies.
- //!
- //!
- //! Refined concepts
- //! ----------------
- //! 1. `Comparable` (free model)\n
- //! Two products `x` and `y` are equal iff they are equal element-wise,
- //! by comparing the first element before the second element.
- //! @include example/product/comparable.cpp
- //!
- //! 2. `Orderable` (free model)\n
- //! Products are ordered using a lexicographical ordering as-if they
- //! were 2-element tuples.
- //!
- //! 3. `Foldable` (free model)\n
- //! Folding a `Product` `p` is equivalent to folding a list containing
- //! `first(p)` and `second(p)`, in that order.
- //!
- //!
- //! Concrete models
- //! ---------------
- //! `hana::pair`
- //!
- //!
- //! [1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Product_(category_theory)
- template <typename P>
- struct Product;
- }} // end namespace boost::hana
- #endif // !BOOST_HANA_FWD_CONCEPT_PRODUCT_HPP
|