A range can be used to slice a Boost Multidimensional array (multi_array). According to the documentation there are several ways of defining a range, however not all of them will compile. I'm using GCC 4.5.2 on Ubuntu 11.04.

#include <boost/multi_array.hpp>

int main() {
    typedef boost::multi_array_types::index_range range;
    range a_range;   

    // indices i where 3 <= i

    // Does compile
    a_range = range().start(3);

    // Does not compile
    a_range = 3 <= range();
    a_range = 2 < range();

    return 0;
}

The compiler output is:

ma.cpp: In function ‘int main()’:
ma.cpp:9:26: error: no match for ‘operator<=’ in ‘3 <= boost::detail::multi_array::index_range<long int, long unsigned int>()’
ma.cpp:10:25: error: no match for ‘operator<’ in ‘2 < boost::detail::multi_array::index_range<long int, long unsigned int>()’

Any idea how I can compile this, or what is missing?

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have you tried explicitly injecting the entire namespace (i.e. using boost::deail::multi_array)? This is where the operators appear to be defined, however maybe with your compiler ADL is failing (ideone for example compiles the above). – Nim Jul 7 '11 at 15:24
tried using namespace boost::detail::multi_array and I still get the error... – Mr E Jul 7 '11 at 15:30
which version of boost? – Nim Jul 7 '11 at 15:36
dpgk says version 1.42.0. Can't see any relevant tickets or anything in the changelog. – Mr E Jul 7 '11 at 15:44
Strange, have just ssh'ed into another machine and it compiles there. Currently checking what's different on there. – Mr E Jul 7 '11 at 15:51
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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

The operator< and operator<= being invoked here are templates; consequently, the value supplied to said operators for the Index argument must be the exact same type as the Index template parameter of the range being supplied.

The boost::multi_array_types::index_range::index type ultimately boils down to a typedef for std::ptrdiff_t; given that you're supplying int literals, clearly for your platform/configuration, std::ptrdiff_t is a typedef for some type other than int (according to your error messages it's long).

The portable fix is to coerce your literals to the proper type:

#include <boost/multi_array.hpp>

int main()
{
    typedef boost::multi_array_types::index_range range;
    typedef range::index index;

    range a_range;
    a_range = index(3) <= range();
    a_range = index(2) < range();

    index i(1);
    a_range = i <= range();
}
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This works. Thanks for the insights. – Mr E Jul 7 '11 at 17:06
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