// (C) Copyright David Abrahams 2002. // (C) Copyright Jeremy Siek 2002. // (C) Copyright Thomas Witt 2002. // Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See // accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at // http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) // no include guard multiple inclusion intended // // This is a temporary workaround until the bulk of this is // available in boost config. // 23/02/03 thw // #include // for prior #include #ifdef BOOST_ITERATOR_CONFIG_DEF # error you have nested config_def #inclusion. #else # define BOOST_ITERATOR_CONFIG_DEF #endif // We enable this always now. Otherwise, the simple case in // libs/iterator/test/constant_iterator_arrow.cpp fails to compile // because the operator-> return is improperly deduced as a non-const // pointer. #if 1 || defined(BOOST_NO_TEMPLATE_PARTIAL_SPECIALIZATION) \ || BOOST_WORKAROUND(__BORLANDC__, BOOST_TESTED_AT(0x531)) // Recall that in general, compilers without partial specialization // can't strip constness. Consider counting_iterator, which normally // passes a const Value to iterator_facade. As a result, any code // which makes a std::vector of the iterator's value_type will fail // when its allocator declares functions overloaded on reference and // const_reference (the same type). // // Furthermore, Borland 5.5.1 drops constness in enough ways that we // end up using a proxy for operator[] when we otherwise shouldn't. // Using reference constness gives it an extra hint that it can // return the value_type from operator[] directly, but is not // strictly necessary. Not sure how best to resolve this one. # define BOOST_ITERATOR_REF_CONSTNESS_KILLS_WRITABILITY 1 #endif #if BOOST_WORKAROUND(__BORLANDC__, BOOST_TESTED_AT(0x5A0)) \ || (BOOST_WORKAROUND(BOOST_INTEL_CXX_VERSION, <= 700) && defined(_MSC_VER)) \ || BOOST_WORKAROUND(__DECCXX_VER, BOOST_TESTED_AT(60590042)) \ || BOOST_WORKAROUND(__SUNPRO_CC, BOOST_TESTED_AT(0x590)) # define BOOST_NO_LVALUE_RETURN_DETECTION # if 0 // test code struct v {}; typedef char (&no)[3]; template no foo(T const&, ...); template char foo(T&, int); struct value_iterator { v operator*() const; }; template struct lvalue_deref_helper { static T& x; enum { value = (sizeof(foo(*x,0)) == 1) }; }; int z2[(lvalue_deref_helper::value == 1) ? 1 : -1]; int z[(lvalue_deref_helper::value) == 1 ? -1 : 1 ]; # endif #endif #if BOOST_WORKAROUND(__MWERKS__, <=0x2407) # define BOOST_NO_IS_CONVERTIBLE // "is_convertible doesn't work for simple types" #endif #if BOOST_WORKAROUND(__GNUC__, == 3) && BOOST_WORKAROUND(__GNUC_MINOR__, < 4) && !defined(__EDG_VERSION__) \ || BOOST_WORKAROUND(__BORLANDC__, BOOST_TESTED_AT(0x551)) # define BOOST_NO_IS_CONVERTIBLE_TEMPLATE // The following program fails to compile: # if 0 // test code #include template struct foo { foo(T); template foo(foo const& other) : p(other.p) { } T p; }; bool x = lslboost::is_convertible, foo >::value; # endif #endif #if !defined(BOOST_MSVC) && (defined(BOOST_NO_SFINAE) || defined(BOOST_NO_IS_CONVERTIBLE) || defined(BOOST_NO_IS_CONVERTIBLE_TEMPLATE)) # define BOOST_NO_STRICT_ITERATOR_INTEROPERABILITY #endif # if BOOST_WORKAROUND(__BORLANDC__, BOOST_TESTED_AT(0x564)) // GCC-2.95 (obsolete) eagerly instantiates templated constructors and conversion // operators in convertibility checks, causing premature errors. // // Borland's problems are harder to diagnose due to lack of an // instantiation stack backtrace. They may be due in part to the fact // that it drops cv-qualification willy-nilly in templates. # define BOOST_NO_ONE_WAY_ITERATOR_INTEROP # endif // no include guard; multiple inclusion intended