|
| template<typename _Ret, typename _Tp> |
| mem_fun_t< _Ret, _Tp > | std::mem_fun (_Ret(_Tp::*__f)()) |
| template<typename _Ret, typename _Tp, typename _Arg> |
| mem_fun1_t< _Ret, _Tp, _Arg > | std::mem_fun (_Ret(_Tp::*__f)(_Arg)) |
| template<typename _Ret, typename _Tp> |
| mem_fun_ref_t< _Ret, _Tp > | std::mem_fun_ref (_Ret(_Tp::*__f)()) |
| template<typename _Ret, typename _Tp, typename _Arg> |
| mem_fun1_ref_t< _Ret, _Tp, _Arg > | std::mem_fun_ref (_Ret(_Tp::*__f)(_Arg)) |
There are a total of 8 = 2^3 function objects in this family. (1) Member functions taking no arguments vs member functions taking one argument. (2) Call through pointer vs call through reference. (3) Const vs non-const member function.
All of this complexity is in the function objects themselves. You can ignore it by using the helper function mem_fun and mem_fun_ref, which create whichever type of adaptor is appropriate.
- Deprecated
- Deprecated in C++11, no longer in the standard since C++17. Use mem_fn instead.