
Modern C++ Programming Cookbook
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Template metaprogramming is a powerful feature of the language that enables us to write and reuse generic code that works with all types. In practice, however, it is often necessary that generic code should work differently, or not at all, with different types, either through intent, or for semantic correctness, performance, or other reasons. For example, you may want a generic algorithm to be implemented differently for POD and non-POD types, or you want a function template to be instantiated only with integral types. C++11 provides a set of type traits to help with this. Type traits are basically meta-types that provide information about other types. The type traits library contains a long list of traits for querying type properties (such as checking whether a type is an integral type or whether two types are the same), but also for performing type transformation (such as removing const
and volatile
qualifiers or adding a pointer to a type...