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Possible Duplicate:
Using Boost adaptors with C++11 lambdas

I would like to use Boost range adaptors to map (transform) a map to a list, through a C++11 lambda function. Like this:

  boost::copy(myMap | transformed([](pair<string, string> p){return p.first;}),
              ostream_iterator<string>(cout, ", "));

This won't work, because std::function does not have a value_type-type. I know that this particular transformation can be done with map_keys, but my point is more general. How can I use C++11 lambdas with Boost?

If it cannot be done without boilerplate, are there any plans to fix this issue? I have tried searching for it, but found suprisingly little.

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  • Note: C++11 lambdas and std::function are two different things. Your code doesn't use std::function at all. Oct 1, 2012 at 14:52
  • I thought that C++11 lambdas were compatible with std::function and, as such, are in some sense std::functions.
    – Gurgeh
    Oct 1, 2012 at 15:19

1 Answer 1

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I found it myself! Starting with Boost 1.51.0, you add

#define BOOST_RESULT_OF_USE_DECLTYPE

Before including the boost files, and it will magically use decltype instead of ::value_type to infer return type. Now my example works!

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    Tread carefully now. This macro is a lot older than Boost 1.51 and has a tendency to cause trouble with older Boost Versions due to a number of problems.
    – pmr
    Oct 1, 2012 at 15:21
  • I require 1.51 in my CMake-file. Is that enough, or are there still trouble ahead? Do you have a reference?
    – Gurgeh
    Oct 1, 2012 at 15:30
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    There is this huge thread on boost.devel thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.boost.devel/233752/focus=234254 It boils down to a bug in decltype spec that got fixed late in the standardization, lots of compilers not conforming to the newest spec and many problems in boost where some specific behavior of decltype/result_of was assumed. You should be fine with Boost 1.51 and a completely compliant compiler.
    – pmr
    Oct 1, 2012 at 15:35

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