54

I study the generic lambdas, and slightly modified the example, so my lambda should capture the upper lambda's variadic parameter pack. So basically what is given to upper lambda as (auto&&...) - should be somehow captured in [=] block.

(The perfect forwarding is another question, I'm curious is it possible here at all?)

#include <iostream>
#include<type_traits>
#include<utility>


// base case
void doPrint(std::ostream& out) {}

template <typename T, typename... Args>
void doPrint(std::ostream& out, T && t, Args && ... args)
{
    out << t << " ";                // add comma here, see below
    doPrint(out, std::forward<Args&&>(args)...);
}

int main()
{
    // generic lambda, operator() is a template with one parameter
    auto vglambda = [](auto printer) {
        return [=](auto&&... ts) // generic lambda, ts is a parameter pack
        {
            printer(std::forward<decltype(ts)>(ts)...);
            return [=] {  // HOW TO capture the variadic ts to be accessible HERE ↓
                printer(std::forward<decltype(ts)>(ts)...); // ERROR: no matchin function call to forward
            }; // nullary lambda (takes no parameters)
        };
    };
    auto p = vglambda([](auto&&...vars) {
        doPrint(std::cout, std::forward<decltype(vars)>(vars)...);
    });
    auto q = p(1, 'a', 3.14,5); // outputs 1a3.14

    //q(); //use the returned lambda "printer"

}
1
  • Aside: you probably don't want to forward the same pack twice
    – Caleth
    Apr 18, 2018 at 16:04

3 Answers 3

116

Perfect capture in C++20

template <typename ... Args>
auto f(Args&& ... args){
    return [... args = std::forward<Args>(args)]{
        // use args
    };
}

C++17 and C++14 workaround

In C++17 we can use a workaround with tuples:

template <typename ... Args>
auto f(Args&& ... args){
    return [args = std::make_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args) ...)]()mutable{
        return std::apply([](auto&& ... args){
            // use args
        }, std::move(args));
    };
}

Unfortunately std::apply is C++17, in C++14 you can implement it yourself or do something similar with boost::hana:

namespace hana = boost::hana;

template <typename ... Args>
auto f(Args&& ... args){
    return [args = hana::make_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args) ...)]()mutable{
        return hana::unpack(std::move(args), [](auto&& ... args){
            // use args
        });
    };
}

It might be usefull to simplify the workaround by a function capture_call:

#include <tuple>

// Capture args and add them as additional arguments
template <typename Lambda, typename ... Args>
auto capture_call(Lambda&& lambda, Args&& ... args){
    return [
        lambda = std::forward<Lambda>(lambda),
        capture_args = std::make_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args) ...)
    ](auto&& ... original_args)mutable{
        return std::apply([&lambda](auto&& ... args){
            lambda(std::forward<decltype(args)>(args) ...);
        }, std::tuple_cat(
            std::forward_as_tuple(original_args ...),
            std::apply([](auto&& ... args){
                return std::forward_as_tuple< Args ... >(
                    std::move(args) ...);
            }, std::move(capture_args))
        ));
    };
}

Use it like this:

#include <iostream>

// returns a callable object without parameters
template <typename ... Args>
auto f1(Args&& ... args){
    return capture_call([](auto&& ... args){
        // args are perfect captured here
        // print captured args via C++17 fold expression
        (std::cout << ... << args) << '\n';
    }, std::forward<Args>(args) ...);
}

// returns a callable object with two int parameters
template <typename ... Args>
auto f2(Args&& ... args){
    return capture_call([](int param1, int param2, auto&& ... args){
        // args are perfect captured here
        std::cout << param1 << param2;
        (std::cout << ... << args) << '\n';
    }, std::forward<Args>(args) ...);
}

int main(){
    f1(1, 2, 3)();     // Call lambda without arguments
    f2(3, 4, 5)(1, 2); // Call lambda with 2 int arguments
}

Here is a C++14 implementation of capture_call:

#include <tuple>

// Implementation detail of a simplified std::apply from C++17
template < typename F, typename Tuple, std::size_t ... I >
constexpr decltype(auto)
apply_impl(F&& f, Tuple&& t, std::index_sequence< I ... >){
    return static_cast< F&& >(f)(std::get< I >(static_cast< Tuple&& >(t)) ...);
}

// Implementation of a simplified std::apply from C++17
template < typename F, typename Tuple >
constexpr decltype(auto) apply(F&& f, Tuple&& t){
    return apply_impl(
        static_cast< F&& >(f), static_cast< Tuple&& >(t),
        std::make_index_sequence< std::tuple_size<
            std::remove_reference_t< Tuple > >::value >{});
}

// Capture args and add them as additional arguments
template <typename Lambda, typename ... Args>
auto capture_call(Lambda&& lambda, Args&& ... args){
    return [
        lambda = std::forward<Lambda>(lambda),
        capture_args = std::make_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args) ...)
    ](auto&& ... original_args)mutable{
        return ::apply([&lambda](auto&& ... args){
            lambda(std::forward<decltype(args)>(args) ...);
        }, std::tuple_cat(
            std::forward_as_tuple(original_args ...),
            ::apply([](auto&& ... args){
                return std::forward_as_tuple< Args ... >(
                    std::move(args) ...);
            }, std::move(capture_args))
        ));
    };
}

capture_call captures variables by value. The perfect means that the move constructor is used if possible. Here is a C++17 code example for better understanding:

#include <tuple>
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/type_index.hpp>


// Capture args and add them as additional arguments
template <typename Lambda, typename ... Args>
auto capture_call(Lambda&& lambda, Args&& ... args){
    return [
        lambda = std::forward<Lambda>(lambda),
        capture_args = std::make_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args) ...)
    ](auto&& ... original_args)mutable{
        return std::apply([&lambda](auto&& ... args){
            lambda(std::forward<decltype(args)>(args) ...);
        }, std::tuple_cat(
            std::forward_as_tuple(original_args ...),
            std::apply([](auto&& ... args){
                return std::forward_as_tuple< Args ... >(
                    std::move(args) ...);
            }, std::move(capture_args))
        ));
    };
}

struct A{
    A(){
        std::cout << "  A::A()\n";
    }

    A(A const&){
        std::cout << "  A::A(A const&)\n";
    }

    A(A&&){
        std::cout << "  A::A(A&&)\n";
    }

    ~A(){
        std::cout << "  A::~A()\n";
    }
};

int main(){
    using boost::typeindex::type_id_with_cvr;

    A a;
    std::cout << "create object end\n\n";

    [b = a]{
        std::cout << "  type of the capture value: "
          << type_id_with_cvr<decltype(b)>().pretty_name()
          << "\n";
    }();
    std::cout << "value capture end\n\n";

    [&b = a]{
        std::cout << "  type of the capture value: "
          << type_id_with_cvr<decltype(b)>().pretty_name()
          << "\n";
    }();
    std::cout << "reference capture end\n\n";

    [b = std::move(a)]{
        std::cout << "  type of the capture value: "
          << type_id_with_cvr<decltype(b)>().pretty_name()
          << "\n";
    }();
    std::cout << "perfect capture end\n\n";

    [b = std::move(a)]()mutable{
        std::cout << "  type of the capture value: "
          << type_id_with_cvr<decltype(b)>().pretty_name()
          << "\n";
    }();
    std::cout << "perfect capture mutable lambda end\n\n";

    capture_call([](auto&& b){
        std::cout << "  type of the capture value: "
          << type_id_with_cvr<decltype(b)>().pretty_name()
          << "\n";
    }, std::move(a))();
    std::cout << "capture_call perfect capture end\n\n";
}

Output:

  A::A()
create object end

  A::A(A const&)
  type of the capture value: A const
  A::~A()
value capture end

  type of the capture value: A&
reference capture end

  A::A(A&&)
  type of the capture value: A const
  A::~A()
perfect capture end

  A::A(A&&)
  type of the capture value: A
  A::~A()
perfect capture mutable lambda end

  A::A(A&&)
  type of the capture value: A&&
  A::~A()
capture_call perfect capture end

  A::~A()

The type of the capture value contains && in the capture_call version because we have to access the value in the internal tuple via reference, while a language supported capture supports direct access to the value.

19
  • 2
    I am a bit confused by the C++17 solution (the one that uses std::make_tuple() and std::apply()). First of all, I expect the tuple created by make_tuple() to contain std::decay-ed types, except for arguments that are of type std::reference_wrapper. Moreover, std::apply() will forward the tuple to std::get(), which I believe will return lvalue reference if we passed an lvalue reference to the tuple or an rvalue reference otherwise. So all in all it doesn't look like we have perfectly-forwarded the argument pack in the capture. What am I missing?
    – Moncef M.
    May 18, 2018 at 15:38
  • 3
    Why make_tuple, not forward_as_tuple?
    – PiotrNycz
    Feb 13, 2019 at 20:07
  • 1
    To also create copies when references are passed in. Feb 14, 2019 at 11:23
  • 2
    Doesn't the C++20 solution also need the mutable? And Args&& args should be Args&& ...args.
    – Mr. Wonko
    Apr 19, 2020 at 14:48
  • 1
    @Mr.Wonko You are right about the ..., I fixed it. Thank you! Whether you need the mutable depends on whether the values in the closure should be const or not. So yes, if you want the exact behavior of the old workaround, then yes. Apr 20, 2020 at 17:08
8

Instead of using std::tuple and std::apply, which clutter the code a lot, you can use std::bind to bind the variadic arguments to your lambda (for a pre-C++20 solution):

template <typename... Args>
auto f(Args&&... args){

    auto functional = [](auto&&... args) { /* lambda body */ };
    return std::bind(std::move(functional), std::forward<Args>(args)...);
}
1
  • non-capturing lambda has no state, not much sence in moving it. Jan 12 at 22:08
3

The perfect forwarding is another question, I'm curious is it possible here at all?

Well... it seems to me that the perfect forwarding is the question.

The capture of ts... works well and if you change, in the inner lambda,

printer(std::forward<decltype(ts)>(ts)...);

with

printer(ts...);

the program compile.

The problem is that capturing ts... by value (using [=]) they become const values and printer() (that is a lambda that receive auto&&...vars) receive references (& or &&).

You can see the same problem with the following functions

void bar (int &&)
 { }

void foo (int const & i)
 { bar(std::forward<decltype(i)>(i)); }

From clang++ I get

tmp_003-14,gcc,clang.cpp:21:4: error: no matching function for call to 'bar'
 { bar(std::forward<decltype(i)>(i)); }
   ^~~
tmp_003-14,gcc,clang.cpp:17:6: note: candidate function not viable: 1st argument
      ('const int') would lose const qualifier
void bar (int &&)
     ^

Another way to solve your problem is capture the ts... as references (so [&]) instead as values.

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