nlohmann::basic_json::operator<=>¶
// since C++20
class basic_json {
std::partial_ordering operator<=>(const_reference rhs) const noexcept; // (1)
template<typename ScalarType>
std::partial_ordering operator<=>(const ScalarType rhs) const noexcept; // (2)
};
-
3-way compares two JSON values producing a result of type
std::partial_ordering
according to the following rules:- Two JSON values compare with a result of
std::partial_ordering::unordered
if either value is discarded. - If both JSON values are of the same type, the result is produced by 3-way comparing their stored values using their respective
operator<=>
. - Integer and floating-point numbers are converted to their common type and then 3-way compared using their respective
operator<=>
. For instance, comparing an integer and a floating-point value will 3-way compare the first value converted to floating-point with the second value. - Otherwise, yields a result by comparing the type (see
value_t
).
- Two JSON values compare with a result of
-
3-way compares a JSON value and a scalar or a scalar and a JSON value by converting the scalar to a JSON value and 3-way comparing both JSON values (see 1).
Template parameters¶
ScalarType
- a scalar type according to
std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value
Parameters¶
rhs
(in)- second value to consider
Return value¶
the std::partial_ordering
of the 3-way comparison of *this
and rhs
Exception safety¶
No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions.
Complexity¶
Linear.
Notes¶
Comparing NaN
NaN
values are unordered within the domain of numbers. The following comparisons all yieldstd::partial_ordering::unordered
:- Comparing a
NaN
with itself. - Comparing a
NaN
with anotherNaN
. - Comparing a
NaN
and any other number.
- Comparing a
Examples¶
Example: (1) comparing JSON values
The example demonstrates comparing several JSON values.
#include <compare>
#include <iostream>
#include <nlohmann/json.hpp>
using json = nlohmann::json;
const char* to_string(const std::partial_ordering& po)
{
if (std::is_lt(po))
{
return "less";
}
else if (std::is_gt(po))
{
return "greater";
}
else if (std::is_eq(po))
{
return "equivalent";
}
return "unordered";
}
int main()
{
// create several JSON values
json array_1 = {1, 2, 3};
json array_2 = {1, 2, 4};
json object_1 = {{"A", "a"}, {"B", "b"}};
json object_2 = {{"B", "b"}, {"A", "a"}};
json number = 17;
json string = "foo";
json discarded = json(json::value_t::discarded);
// output values and comparisons
std::cout << array_1 << " <=> " << array_2 << " := " << to_string(array_1 <=> array_2) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
std::cout << object_1 << " <=> " << object_2 << " := " << to_string(object_1 <=> object_2) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
std::cout << string << " <=> " << number << " := " << to_string(string <=> number) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
std::cout << string << " <=> " << discarded << " := " << to_string(string <=> discarded) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
}
Output:
[1,2,3] <=> [1,2,4] := less
{"A":"a","B":"b"} <=> {"A":"a","B":"b"} := equivalent
"foo" <=> 17 := greater
"foo" <=> <discarded> := unordered
Example: (2) comparing JSON values and scalars
The example demonstrates comparing several JSON values and scalars.
#include <compare>
#include <iostream>
#include <nlohmann/json.hpp>
using json = nlohmann::json;
const char* to_string(const std::partial_ordering& po)
{
if (std::is_lt(po))
{
return "less";
}
else if (std::is_gt(po))
{
return "greater";
}
else if (std::is_eq(po))
{
return "equivalent";
}
return "unordered";
}
int main()
{
using float_limits = std::numeric_limits<json::number_float_t>;
constexpr auto nan = float_limits::quiet_NaN();
// create several JSON values
json boolean = false;
json number = 17;
json string = "17";
// output values and comparisons
std::cout << std::boolalpha << std::fixed;
std::cout << boolean << " <=> " << true << " := " << to_string(boolean <=> true) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
std::cout << number << " <=> " << 17.0 << " := " << to_string(number <=> 17.0) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
std::cout << number << " <=> " << nan << " := " << to_string(number <=> nan) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
std::cout << string << " <=> " << 17 << " := " << to_string(string <=> 17) << '\n'; // *NOPAD*
}
Output:
false <=> true := less
17 <=> 17.000000 := equivalent
17 <=> nan := unordered
"17" <=> 17 := greater
See also¶
- operator== - comparison: equal
- operator!= - comparison: not equal
- operator< - comparison: less than
- operator<= - comparison: less than or equal
- operator> - comparison: greater than
- operator>= - comparison: greater than or equal
Version history¶
- Added in version 3.11.0.
- Added in version 3.11.0.
Last update: August 5, 2022