std::error_condition - cppreference.com (original) (raw)
std::error_condition
holds a platform-independent value identifying an error condition. Like std::error_code, it is uniquely identified by an integer value and a std::error_category, but unlike std::error_code, the value is not platform-dependent.
A typical implementation holds one integer data member (the value) and a pointer to an std::error_category.
[edit] Member functions
(constructor) | constructs an error_condition (public member function) [edit] |
---|---|
operator= | replaces the contents (public member function) [edit] |
assign | replaces the contents (public member function) [edit] |
clear | sets the error_condition to value 0 in generic_category (public member function) [edit] |
value | obtains the value of the error_condition (public member function) [edit] |
category | obtains the error_category for this error_condition (public member function) [edit] |
message | obtains the explanatory string (public member function) [edit] |
operator bool | checks if the value is non-zero (public member function) [edit] |
[edit] Non-member functions
[edit] Helper classes
[edit] Notes
The comparison between a std::error_code and a std::error_condition
is defined by their error categories. Notably, an error condition of std::generic_category may compare equal to an error code of a specific category (e.g. std::system_category), if they represent the same kind of error.
A std::errc value can be compared to an error code via implicit conversion to std::error_condition
.