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Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -04001.. _using-libcxx:
2
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +00003============
4Using libc++
5============
6
7.. contents::
8 :local:
9
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040010Usually, libc++ is packaged and shipped by a vendor through some delivery vehicle
11(operating system distribution, SDK, toolchain, etc) and users don't need to do
12anything special in order to use the library.
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000013
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040014This page contains information about configuration knobs that can be used by
15users when they know libc++ is used by their toolchain, and how to use libc++
16when it is not the default library used by their toolchain.
17
18
19Using a different version of the C++ Standard
20=============================================
21
22Libc++ implements the various versions of the C++ Standard. Changing the version of
23the standard can be done by passing ``-std=c++XY`` to the compiler. Libc++ will
24automatically detect what Standard is being used and will provide functionality that
25matches that Standard in the library.
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000026
27.. code-block:: bash
28
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040029 $ clang++ -std=c++17 test.cpp
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000030
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040031.. warning::
32 Using ``-std=c++XY`` with a version of the Standard that has not been ratified yet
33 is considered unstable. Libc++ reserves the right to make breaking changes to the
34 library until the standard has been ratified.
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000035
Eric Fiselier02cea5e2018-07-27 03:07:09 +000036
Louis Dionne3d895a12022-07-19 10:44:06 -040037Enabling experimental C++ Library features
38==========================================
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000039
Louis Dionne3d895a12022-07-19 10:44:06 -040040Libc++ provides implementations of some experimental features. Experimental features
41are either Technical Specifications (TSes) or official features that were voted to
42the Standard but whose implementation is not complete or stable yet in libc++. Those
43are disabled by default because they are neither API nor ABI stable. However, the
Louis Dionneeb796712022-07-20 10:42:04 -040044``-fexperimental-library`` compiler flag can be defined to turn those features on.
Eric Fiselierfa43a5c2016-05-03 22:32:08 +000045
46.. warning::
Louis Dionneeb796712022-07-20 10:42:04 -040047 Experimental libraries are experimental.
Louis Dionne3d895a12022-07-19 10:44:06 -040048 * The contents of the ``<experimental/...>`` headers and the associated static
Eric Fiselierfa43a5c2016-05-03 22:32:08 +000049 library will not remain compatible between versions.
50 * No guarantees of API or ABI stability are provided.
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040051 * When the standardized version of an experimental feature is implemented,
Louis Dionne37677132019-06-11 14:48:40 +000052 the experimental feature is removed two releases after the non-experimental
53 version has shipped. The full policy is explained :ref:`here <experimental features>`.
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000054
Louis Dionneeb796712022-07-20 10:42:04 -040055.. note::
56 On compilers that do not support the ``-fexperimental-library`` flag, users can
57 define the ``_LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL`` macro and manually link against the
58 appropriate static library (usually shipped as ``libc++experimental.a``) to get
59 access to experimental library features.
60
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000061
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040062Using libc++ when it is not the system default
63==============================================
64
65On systems where libc++ is provided but is not the default, Clang provides a flag
66called ``-stdlib=`` that can be used to decide which standard library is used.
67Using ``-stdlib=libc++`` will select libc++:
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000068
69.. code-block:: bash
70
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040071 $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ test.cpp
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000072
Louis Dionnee4745512021-09-07 12:55:48 -040073On systems where libc++ is the library in use by default such as macOS and FreeBSD,
74this flag is not required.
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040075
76
77.. _alternate libcxx:
78
79Using a custom built libc++
80===========================
81
82Most compilers provide a way to disable the default behavior for finding the
83standard library and to override it with custom paths. With Clang, this can
84be done with:
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000085
86.. code-block:: bash
87
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040088 $ clang++ -nostdinc++ -nostdlib++ \
89 -isystem <install>/include/c++/v1 \
90 -L <install>/lib \
91 -Wl,-rpath,<install>/lib \
92 -lc++ \
93 test.cpp
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000094
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040095The option ``-Wl,-rpath,<install>/lib`` adds a runtime library search path,
96which causes the system's dynamic linker to look for libc++ in ``<install>/lib``
97whenever the program is loaded.
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +000098
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -040099GCC does not support the ``-nostdlib++`` flag, so one must use ``-nodefaultlibs``
100instead. Since that removes all the standard system libraries and not just libc++,
101the system libraries must be re-added manually. For example:
Eric Fiselierd720d1f2015-08-22 19:40:49 +0000102
103.. code-block:: bash
104
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400105 $ g++ -nostdinc++ -nodefaultlibs \
106 -isystem <install>/include/c++/v1 \
107 -L <install>/lib \
108 -Wl,-rpath,<install>/lib \
109 -lc++ -lc++abi -lm -lc -lgcc_s -lgcc \
110 test.cpp
Eric Fiselier41ee4312016-01-20 01:26:30 +0000111
112
113GDB Pretty printers for libc++
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400114==============================
Eric Fiselier41ee4312016-01-20 01:26:30 +0000115
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400116GDB does not support pretty-printing of libc++ symbols by default. However, libc++ does
117provide pretty-printers itself. Those can be used as:
Eric Fiselier41ee4312016-01-20 01:26:30 +0000118
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400119.. code-block:: bash
Eric Fiselier41ee4312016-01-20 01:26:30 +0000120
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400121 $ gdb -ex "source <libcxx>/utils/gdb/libcxx/printers.py" \
122 -ex "python register_libcxx_printer_loader()" \
123 <args>
Eric Fiselierb3825302016-11-13 23:00:30 +0000124
125
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500126.. _assertions-mode:
127
128Enabling the "safe libc++" mode
129===============================
130
131Libc++ contains a number of assertions whose goal is to catch undefined behavior in the
132library, usually caused by precondition violations. Those assertions do not aim to be
133exhaustive -- instead they aim to provide a good balance between safety and performance.
134In particular, these assertions do not change the complexity of algorithms. However, they
135might, in some cases, interfere with compiler optimizations.
136
137By default, these assertions are turned off. Vendors can decide to turn them on while building
138the compiled library by defining ``LIBCXX_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=ON`` at CMake configuration time.
139When ``LIBCXX_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS`` is used, the compiled library will be built with assertions
140enabled, **and** user code will be built with assertions enabled by default. If
141``LIBCXX_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=OFF`` at CMake configure time, the compiled library will not contain
142assertions and the default when building user code will be to have assertions disabled.
143As a user, you can consult your vendor to know whether assertions are enabled by default.
144
145Furthermore, independently of any vendor-selected default, users can always control whether
146assertions are enabled in their code by defining ``_LIBCPP_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=0|1`` before
147including any libc++ header (we recommend passing ``-D_LIBCPP_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=X`` to the
148compiler). Note that if the compiled library was built by the vendor without assertions,
149functions compiled inside the static or shared library won't have assertions enabled even
150if the user defines ``_LIBCPP_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=1`` (the same is true for the inverse case
151where the static or shared library was compiled **with** assertions but the user tries to
152disable them). However, most of the code in libc++ is in the headers, so the user-selected
153value for ``_LIBCPP_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS`` (if any) will usually be respected.
154
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400155When an assertion fails, the program is aborted through a special verbose termination function. The
156library provides a default function that prints an error message and calls ``std::abort()``. Note
157that this function is provided by the static or shared library, so it is only available when deploying
Louis Dionne9a4b6542022-08-04 15:25:48 -0400158to a platform where the compiled library is sufficiently recent. On older platforms, the program will
159terminate in an unspecified unsuccessful manner, but the quality of diagnostics won't be great.
160However, users can also override that function with their own, which can be useful to either provide
161custom behavior or when deploying to an older platform where the default function isn't available.
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500162
Louis Dionne9a4b6542022-08-04 15:25:48 -0400163Replacing the default verbose termination function is done by defining the
164``_LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_CUSTOM_VERBOSE_ABORT_PROVIDED`` macro in all translation units of your program
165and defining the following function in exactly one translation unit:
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500166
167.. code-block:: cpp
168
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400169 void __libcpp_verbose_abort(char const* format, ...)
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500170
171This mechanism is similar to how one can replace the default definition of ``operator new``
172and ``operator delete``. For example:
173
174.. code-block:: cpp
175
176 // In HelloWorldHandler.cpp
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400177 #include <version> // must include any libc++ header before defining the function (C compatibility headers excluded)
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500178
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400179 void std::__libcpp_verbose_abort(char const* format, ...) {
Louis Dionne400269d2022-07-25 13:19:51 -0400180 va_list list;
181 va_start(list, format);
182 std::vfprintf(stderr, format, list);
183 va_end(list);
184
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500185 std::abort();
186 }
187
188 // In HelloWorld.cpp
189 #include <vector>
190
191 int main() {
192 std::vector<int> v;
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400193 int& x = v[0]; // Your termination function will be called here if _LIBCPP_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=1
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500194 }
195
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400196Also note that the verbose termination function should never return. Since assertions in libc++
197catch undefined behavior, your code will proceed with undefined behavior if your function is called
198and does return.
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500199
Louis Dionnea164faa2022-07-25 13:43:47 -0400200Furthermore, exceptions should not be thrown from the function. Indeed, many functions in the
201library are ``noexcept``, and any exception thrown from the termination function will result
202in ``std::terminate`` being called.
Louis Dionne6e8eb552022-03-03 17:37:03 -0500203
Eric Fiselierb3825302016-11-13 23:00:30 +0000204Libc++ Configuration Macros
205===========================
206
207Libc++ provides a number of configuration macros which can be used to enable
208or disable extended libc++ behavior, including enabling "debug mode" or
209thread safety annotations.
210
Eric Fiselierb3825302016-11-13 23:00:30 +0000211**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_THREAD_SAFETY_ANNOTATIONS**:
212 This macro is used to enable -Wthread-safety annotations on libc++'s
Jennifer Chukwub9788092021-04-17 20:34:06 +0530213 ``std::mutex`` and ``std::lock_guard``. By default, these annotations are
Eric Fiselierb3825302016-11-13 23:00:30 +0000214 disabled and must be manually enabled by the user.
Shoaib Meenaif36e9882016-12-05 19:40:12 +0000215
216**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_VISIBILITY_ANNOTATIONS**:
217 This macro is used to disable all visibility annotations inside libc++.
218 Defining this macro and then building libc++ with hidden visibility gives a
219 build of libc++ which does not export any symbols, which can be useful when
220 building statically for inclusion into another library.
Eric Fiselier41b686e2016-12-08 23:57:08 +0000221
Eric Fiseliera7a14ed2017-01-13 22:02:08 +0000222**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_ADDITIONAL_DIAGNOSTICS**:
223 This macro disables the additional diagnostics generated by libc++ using the
224 `diagnose_if` attribute. These additional diagnostics include checks for:
225
Louis Dionne878a3a82018-12-06 21:46:17 +0000226 * Giving `set`, `map`, `multiset`, `multimap` and their `unordered_`
227 counterparts a comparator which is not const callable.
228 * Giving an unordered associative container a hasher that is not const
229 callable.
Eric Fiseliera7a14ed2017-01-13 22:02:08 +0000230
Shoaib Meenaicfd19602017-10-09 19:25:17 +0000231**_LIBCPP_NO_VCRUNTIME**:
232 Microsoft's C and C++ headers are fairly entangled, and some of their C++
233 headers are fairly hard to avoid. In particular, `vcruntime_new.h` gets pulled
234 in from a lot of other headers and provides definitions which clash with
235 libc++ headers, such as `nothrow_t` (note that `nothrow_t` is a struct, so
236 there's no way for libc++ to provide a compatible definition, since you can't
237 have multiple definitions).
238
239 By default, libc++ solves this problem by deferring to Microsoft's vcruntime
240 headers where needed. However, it may be undesirable to depend on vcruntime
241 headers, since they may not always be available in cross-compilation setups,
242 or they may clash with other headers. The `_LIBCPP_NO_VCRUNTIME` macro
243 prevents libc++ from depending on vcruntime headers. Consequently, it also
244 prevents libc++ headers from being interoperable with vcruntime headers (from
245 the aforementioned clashes), so users of this macro are promising to not
246 attempt to combine libc++ headers with the problematic vcruntime headers. This
247 macro also currently prevents certain `operator new`/`operator delete`
248 replacement scenarios from working, e.g. replacing `operator new` and
249 expecting a non-replaced `operator new[]` to call the replaced `operator new`.
250
Nikolas Klauser3e7bca12022-08-19 15:41:56 +0200251**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_NODISCARD_EXT**:
252 This macro allows the library to apply ``[[nodiscard]]`` to entities as an extension.
253 See :ref:`Extended Applications of [[nodiscard]] <nodiscard extension>` for more information.
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000254
Louis Dionneded5b772019-03-12 20:10:06 +0000255**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS**:
256 This macro disables warnings when using deprecated components. For example,
257 using `std::auto_ptr` when compiling in C++11 mode will normally trigger a
258 warning saying that `std::auto_ptr` is deprecated. If the macro is defined,
259 no warning will be emitted. By default, this macro is not defined.
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000260
Eric Fiselierddd77792017-02-17 03:25:08 +0000261C++17 Specific Configuration Macros
262-----------------------------------
263**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_FEATURES**:
264 This macro is used to re-enable all the features removed in C++17. The effect
265 is equivalent to manually defining each macro listed below.
266
Eric Fiselier65d5b4c2017-02-17 03:30:25 +0000267**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_AUTO_PTR**:
Arthur O'Dwyera6b51072021-05-24 18:36:17 -0400268 This macro is used to re-enable `auto_ptr`.
269
270**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_BINDERS**:
271 This macro is used to re-enable the `binder1st`, `binder2nd`,
272 `pointer_to_unary_function`, `pointer_to_binary_function`, `mem_fun_t`,
273 `mem_fun1_t`, `mem_fun_ref_t`, `mem_fun1_ref_t`, `const_mem_fun_t`,
274 `const_mem_fun1_t`, `const_mem_fun_ref_t`, and `const_mem_fun1_ref_t`
275 class templates, and the `bind1st`, `bind2nd`, `mem_fun`, `mem_fun_ref`,
276 and `ptr_fun` functions.
277
278**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_RANDOM_SHUFFLE**:
279 This macro is used to re-enable the `random_shuffle` algorithm.
280
281**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX17_REMOVED_UNEXPECTED_FUNCTIONS**:
282 This macro is used to re-enable `set_unexpected`, `get_unexpected`, and
283 `unexpected`.
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000284
Mark de Wever0c9fe4c2022-07-07 19:07:03 +0200285C++20 Specific Configuration Macros
286-----------------------------------
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000287**_LIBCPP_DISABLE_NODISCARD_AFTER_CXX17**:
288 This macro can be used to disable diagnostics emitted from functions marked
289 ``[[nodiscard]]`` in dialects after C++17. See :ref:`Extended Applications of [[nodiscard]] <nodiscard extension>`
290 for more information.
291
Arthur O'Dwyera6b51072021-05-24 18:36:17 -0400292**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_FEATURES**:
293 This macro is used to re-enable all the features removed in C++20. The effect
294 is equivalent to manually defining each macro listed below.
295
296**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_MEMBERS**:
297 This macro is used to re-enable redundant members of `allocator<T>`,
298 including `pointer`, `reference`, `rebind`, `address`, `max_size`,
299 `construct`, `destroy`, and the two-argument overload of `allocate`.
Arthur O'Dwyera6b51072021-05-24 18:36:17 -0400300
Ilya Biryukov051e6b92022-06-15 10:55:55 +0200301**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_VOID_SPECIALIZATION**:
302 This macro is used to re-enable the library-provided specializations of
303 `allocator<void>` and `allocator<const void>`.
304 Use it in conjunction with `_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_ALLOCATOR_MEMBERS`
305 to ensure that removed members of `allocator<void>` can be accessed.
306
Arthur O'Dwyerf5486c82021-05-25 14:34:18 -0400307**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_BINDER_TYPEDEFS**:
308 This macro is used to re-enable the `argument_type`, `result_type`,
309 `first_argument_type`, and `second_argument_type` members of class
310 templates such as `plus`, `logical_not`, `hash`, and `owner_less`.
311
Arthur O'Dwyera6b51072021-05-24 18:36:17 -0400312**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_NEGATORS**:
313 This macro is used to re-enable `not1`, `not2`, `unary_negate`,
314 and `binary_negate`.
315
316**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_RAW_STORAGE_ITERATOR**:
317 This macro is used to re-enable `raw_storage_iterator`.
318
wmbatf5b33762021-07-02 17:08:36 +0000319**_LIBCPP_ENABLE_CXX20_REMOVED_TYPE_TRAITS**:
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400320 This macro is used to re-enable `is_literal_type`, `is_literal_type_v`,
wmbatf5b33762021-07-02 17:08:36 +0000321 `result_of` and `result_of_t`.
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000322
Louis Dionne4b1b70d2021-07-06 10:39:01 -0400323
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000324Libc++ Extensions
325=================
326
327This section documents various extensions provided by libc++, how they're
328provided, and any information regarding how to use them.
329
330.. _nodiscard extension:
331
332Extended applications of ``[[nodiscard]]``
333------------------------------------------
334
335The ``[[nodiscard]]`` attribute is intended to help users find bugs where
336function return values are ignored when they shouldn't be. After C++17 the
337C++ standard has started to declared such library functions as ``[[nodiscard]]``.
338However, this application is limited and applies only to dialects after C++17.
339Users who want help diagnosing misuses of STL functions may desire a more
340liberal application of ``[[nodiscard]]``.
341
342For this reason libc++ provides an extension that does just that! The
Nikolas Klauser3e7bca12022-08-19 15:41:56 +0200343extension must be enabled by defining ``_LIBCPP_ENABLE_NODISCARD_EXT``. The extended
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000344applications of ``[[nodiscard]]`` takes two forms:
345
3461. Backporting ``[[nodiscard]]`` to entities declared as such by the
347 standard in newer dialects, but not in the present one.
348
Arthur O'Dwyer108facb2021-04-05 14:56:03 -04003492. Extended applications of ``[[nodiscard]]``, at the library's discretion,
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000350 applied to entities never declared as such by the standard.
351
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000352Entities declared with ``_LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT``
353~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
354
355This section lists all extended applications of ``[[nodiscard]]`` to entities
356which no dialect declares as such (See the second form described above).
357
Nico Weber471b10a2019-04-03 18:13:08 +0000358* ``adjacent_find``
359* ``all_of``
360* ``any_of``
361* ``binary_search``
362* ``clamp``
363* ``count_if``
364* ``count``
365* ``equal_range``
366* ``equal``
367* ``find_end``
368* ``find_first_of``
369* ``find_if_not``
370* ``find_if``
371* ``find``
Roman Lebedevb5959fa2018-09-22 17:54:48 +0000372* ``get_temporary_buffer``
Nico Weber471b10a2019-04-03 18:13:08 +0000373* ``includes``
374* ``is_heap_until``
375* ``is_heap``
376* ``is_partitioned``
377* ``is_permutation``
378* ``is_sorted_until``
379* ``is_sorted``
380* ``lexicographical_compare``
381* ``lower_bound``
382* ``max_element``
383* ``max``
384* ``min_element``
385* ``min``
386* ``minmax_element``
387* ``minmax``
388* ``mismatch``
389* ``none_of``
390* ``remove_if``
391* ``remove``
392* ``search_n``
393* ``search``
394* ``unique``
395* ``upper_bound``
Louis Dionne346587e2019-08-13 11:12:28 +0000396* ``lock_guard``'s constructors
Arthur O'Dwyer108facb2021-04-05 14:56:03 -0400397* ``as_const``
Louis Dionne1462d4d2020-05-28 14:28:38 -0400398* ``bit_cast``
Arthur O'Dwyer108facb2021-04-05 14:56:03 -0400399* ``forward``
400* ``move``
401* ``move_if_noexcept``
402* ``identity::operator()``
403* ``to_integer``
404* ``to_underlying``
Louis Dionne39948462022-06-01 15:25:14 -0400405
Louis Dionne7b125df2022-08-10 17:34:45 -0400406Extended integral type support
407------------------------------
408
409Several platforms support types that are not specified in the Standard, such as
410the 128-bit integral types ``__int128_t`` and ``__uint128_t``. As an extension,
411libc++ does a best-effort attempt to support these types like other integral
412types, by supporting them notably in:
413
414* ``<bits>``
415* ``<charconv>``
416* ``<functional>``
417* ``<type_traits>``
418* ``<format>``
419* ``<random>``
420
Louis Dionne39948462022-06-01 15:25:14 -0400421Additional types supported in random distributions
422~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
423
424The `C++ Standard <http://eel.is/c++draft/rand#req.genl-1.5>`_ mentions that instantiating several random number
425distributions with types other than ``short``, ``int``, ``long``, ``long long``, and their unsigned versions is
426undefined. As an extension, libc++ supports instantiating ``binomial_distribution``, ``discrete_distribution``,
427``geometric_distribution``, ``negative_binomial_distribution``, ``poisson_distribution``, and ``uniform_int_distribution``
428with ``int8_t``, ``__int128_t`` and their unsigned versions.
Mark de Wever367fe0f2022-07-07 20:02:07 +0200429
Mark de Wever50237422022-07-15 07:42:17 +0200430Extensions to ``<format>``
431--------------------------
432
433The exposition only type ``basic-format-string`` and its typedefs
434``format-string`` and ``wformat-string`` became ``basic_format_string``,
435``format_string``, and ``wformat_string`` in C++23. Libc++ makes these types
436available in C++20 as an extension.