◐ Shell
clean mode source ↗

std::contracts::contract_violation - cppreference.com

From cppreference.com

class contract_violation;
(since C++26)

The class std::contracts::contract_violation defines the type of objects used to represent a contract violation that has been detected during the evaluation of a contract assertion with a particular evaluation semantic.

Objects of this type can only be created by the implementation when the contract-violation handler needs to be invoked. Users cannot create such objects directly.

Member functions

(constructor)

[deleted]

contract_violation objects cannot be constructed by users
(public member function)

operator=

[deleted]

contract_violation objects cannot be assigned
(public member function)

(destructor)

[possibly virtual]

destructs the contract_violation object
(public member function)
General contract-violation information

kind

returns the kind of the contract assertion violated
(public member function)

semantic

returns the evaluation semantic when the contract violation occurs
(public member function)

is_terminating

returns whether the evaluation semantic is terminating
(public member function)

detection_mode

returns the reason that causes the contract violation
(public member function)
Miscellaneous contract-violation information

comment

returns the explanatory string about the contract violation
(public member function)

location

returns a std::source_location indicating the location of the contract violation
(public member function)

std::contracts::contract_violation::contract_violation

contract_violation( const contract_violation& ) = delete;
(since C++26)

The copy destructor is defined as deleted. std::contracts::contract_violation is not CopyConstructible.

Notes

Other constructors are for internal usage only, they are not user-accessible.

std::contracts::contract_violation::operator=

contract_violation& operator=( const contract_violation& ) = delete;
(since C++26)

The copy assignment operator is defined as deleted. std::contracts::contract_violation is not CopyAssignable.

std::contracts::contract_violation::~contract_violation

/* see below */ ~contract_violation();
(since C++26)

Destructs the contract_violation object.

Notes

It is implementation-defined whether the destructor is virtual.

std::contracts::contract_violation::kind

std::contracts::assertion_kind kind() const noexcept;
(since C++26)

Return value

Returns the enumerator value corresponding to the syntactic form of the violated contract assertion.

std::contracts::contract_violation::semantic

std::contracts::evaluation_semantic semantic() const noexcept;
(since C++26)

Return value

Returns the enumerator value corresponding to the evaluation semantic with which the violated contract assertion was evaluated.

std::contracts::contract_violation::is_terminating

bool is_terminating() const noexcept;
(since C++26)

Return value

If the evaluation semantic is a terminating semantic, returns true. Otherwise returns false.

std::contracts::contract_violation::detection_mode

std::contracts::detection_mode detection_mode() const noexcept;
(since C++26)

Return value

Returns the enumerator value corresponding to the reasons that cause the contract violation.

const char* comment() const noexcept;
(since C++26)

Return value

Returns an implementation-defined null-terminated multibyte string in the ordinary literal encoding.

Notes

The C++ standard recommends that the string returned should contain a textual representation of the predicate of the violated contract assertion or an empty string if storing a textual representation is undesired.

std::contracts::contract_violation::location

std::source_location location() const noexcept;
(since C++26)

Return value

Returns a std::source_location object with implementation-defined value.

Notes

The C++ standard recommends that the value returned should be a default constructed std::source_location object or a value identifying the violated contract assertion:

  • When possible, if the violated contract assertion was a precondition assertion, the source location of the function invocation should be returned.
  • Otherwise, the source location of the contract assertion should be returned.