Perhaps you’re expecting some kind of magic that makes type traits work. In that case, be disappointed –?there is no magic. Type traits are manually defined for each type. For example, consider iterator_traits
, which provides typedefs (e.g. value_type
) for iterators.
Using them, you can write
iterator_traits<vector<int>::iterator>::value_type x;
iterator_traits<int*>::value_type y;
// `x` and `y` have type int.
But to make this work, there is actually an explicit definition somewhere in the <iterator>
header, which reads something like this:
template <typename T>
struct iterator_traits<T*> {
typedef T value_type;
// …
};
This is a partial specialization of the iterator_traits
type for types of the form T*
, i.e. pointers of some generic type.
In the same vein, iterator_traits
are specialized for other iterators, e.g. typename vector<T>::iterator
.
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