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There are some traits classes which authors of new backends should be aware of:
namespace boost{ namespace multiprecision{ namespace detail{ template<typename From, typename To> struct is_explicitly_convertible; }}}
Inherits from std::integral_constant<bool,true>
if type From
has an explicit conversion from To
.
template <class From, class To> struct is_lossy_conversion { static const bool value = see below; };
Member value
is true if the
conversion from From
to
To
would result in a loss
of precision, and false
otherwise.
The default version of this trait simply checks whether the kind
of conversion (for example from a floating-point to an integer type) is inherently
lossy. Note that if either of the types From
or To
are of an unknown number
category (because number_category
is not specialised for that type) then this trait will be true
.
template<typename From, typename To> struct is_restricted_conversion { static const bool value = see below; };
Member value
is true
if From
is only explicitly convertible to To
and not implicitly convertible, or if is_lossy_conversion<From, To>::value
is true
.
Otherwise false
.
Note that while this trait is the ultimate arbiter of which constructors
are marked as explicit
in class
number
, authors of backend
types should generally specialise one of the traits above, rather than this
one directly.
template <class T> is_signed_number; template <class T> is_unsigned_number;
These two traits inherit from either std::integral_constant<bool,
true>
or std::integral_constant<bool, false>
, by default types are assumed to be signed
unless is_unsigned_number
is specialized for that type.