user2023370
user2023370

Reputation: 11037

Using array as tuple member: Valid C++11 tuple declaration?

The code below compiles fine with G++ 4.7.2:

#include <tuple>
std::tuple<float,int[2]> x;

With clang++ 3.2, however, the following error is produced:

error: array initializer must be an initializer list.

If I remove the float type from the tuple declaration, the error disappears. Is the above tuple declaration valid?

($CXX -std=c++11 -c file.cpp)

Upvotes: 4

Views: 657

Answers (1)

jogojapan
jogojapan

Reputation: 69977

I don't think there is anything in the Standard that forbids your declaration. However, you will run into problems as soon as you try to initialise, copy, move or assign your tuples, because for these operations, all member types of the tuple must be able to be used as initialisers, copy-constructible, copy-assignable and move-assignable, respectively (§20.4.2.1). None of this is the case for arrays.

You will be better off using std::array instead of C-style arrays:

#include <tuple>
#include <array>
std::tuple<float,std::array<int,2> > x;

Upvotes: 4

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