std::in_range - cppreference.com

From cppreference.com

template< class R, class T > constexpr bool in_range( T t ) noexcept;

(since C++20)

Returns true if the value of t is in the range of values that can be represented in R, that is, if t can be converted to R in a value-preserving manner.

It is a compile-time error if either T or U is a non-integer type, a character type, or bool.

Parameters

Return value

true if the value of t is representable in R, false otherwise.

Possible implementation

template<class R, class T>
constexpr bool in_range(T t) noexcept
{
    return std::cmp_greater_equal(t, std::numeric_limits<R>::min()) &&
        std::cmp_less_equal(t, std::numeric_limits<R>::max());
}

Notes

This function cannot be used with enums (including std::byte), char, char8_t, char16_t, char32_t, wchar_t and bool.

Feature-test macro Value Std Feature
__cpp_lib_integer_comparison_functions 202002L (C++20) Integer comparison functions

Example

#include <iostream>
#include <utility>

int main()
{
    std::cout << std::boolalpha;

    std::cout << std::in_range<std::size_t>(-1) << '\n';
    std::cout << std::in_range<std::size_t>(42) << '\n';
}

Output:

See also

returns the smaller of the given values
(algorithm function object)[edit]
returns the greater of the given values
(algorithm function object)[edit]
clamps a value between a pair of boundary values
(algorithm function object)[edit]
linear interpolation function
(function) [edit]