This answer of @R. Martinho Fernandes shows, that the safe-bool idiom is apperently deprecated in C++11, as it can be replaced by a simple

explicit operator bool() const;

according to the standard quote in the answer §4 [conv] p3:

An expression e can be implicitly converted to a type T if and only if the declaration T t=e; is well-formed, for some invented temporary variable t (§8.5). Certain language constructs require that an expression be converted to a Boolean value. An expression e appearing in such a context is said to be contextually converted to bool and is well-formed if and only if the declaration bool t(e); is well-formed, for some invented temporary variable t (§8.5).

The highlighted part clearly shows the "implicit explicit cast" (called "contextual conversion" in the standard) as @R. Martinho put it.

The "certain language constructs" that require that "implicit explicit cast" seem to be the following:

  • if, while, for (§6.4 [stmt.select] p4)
  • binary logical operators && and || (§5.14 [expr.log.and/or] p1 for both)
  • the logical negation operator ! (§5.3.1 [expr.unary.op] p9)
  • conditional operator ?: (§5.14 [expr.cond] p1)
  • static_assert (§7 [dcl.dcl] p4)
  • noexcept (§15.4 [except.spec] p2)

Is our assumption in the title correct? I hope we didn't overlook any potential drawbacks.

link|improve this question

5  
+1: I love this type of question that teaches me new things about the upcoming standard. – Björn Pollex Jun 25 '11 at 18:57
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 25 down vote accepted

Yes. This is the example for problems with only having implicit user-defined conversions and explicit user-defined conversion operators were practically invented because of this problem and to replace all the safe-bool stuff with something a lot cleaner and more logical.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I wouldn't call it "obsolete". Not everyone is taking the leap to C++11 (not even 1 year old) as of yet. And even if the a good amount of coders were, the ability to keep the code backwards compatible would be a must, considering this kind of idiom seems more sensible for libraries than for programs proper.

link|improve this answer
2  
I was purely talking in the presence of C++11. This question neither touches old code, backwards compatability, or the unwillingness to change to C++11 aware compilers. Also note that C++11 in itself is not fully backwards compatable, it introduced breaking changes. – Xeo Dec 18 '11 at 19:43
Wouldn't have been able to know that, sorry. I didn't consider only the answer linked at the beginning, but also the fact that the question is tagged [c++] and [c++-faq], that led me to think that evaluation of both stages of the language was relevant. – Luis Machuca Dec 22 '11 at 22:07
You're certainly right though, I didn't explicitly state it in the question. I'll edit that in, thanks for the heads up. – Xeo Dec 22 '11 at 22:59
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.