I realize this is a ludicrous question for something that takes less than 2 seconds to implement. But I vaguely remember reading that one was introduced with the new standard.
I grep'ed VC10's headers and came up with nothing. Can you help? It's bugging me! :)
edit:
On second thought, the new functor I was remembering was probably the unrelated std::default_deleter
.
You could always write a no-op lambda: []{}
How about this?
// Return a noop function
template <typename T>
struct noop
{
T return_val;
noop (T retval = T ())
: return_val (retval)
{
}
T
operator (...)
{
return return_val;
}
};
template <>
struct noop<void>
{
void
operator (...)
{
}
};
This should work for just about any use.
I use this as a drop-in no-op for cases where I expect a functor that does not return any value.
struct VoidNoOp {
void operator()() const { }
template<class A>
void operator()(A a) const { (void)(a); }
template<class A, class B>
void operator()(A a, B b) const { (void)(a); (void)(b); }
template<class A, class B, class C>
void operator()(A a, B b, C c) const { (void)(a); (void)(b); (void)(c); }
};
Here is a C++11 variation for arbitrary numbers of parameters:
struct VoidNoOp {
void operator()() const { };
template<typename P1, typename... Params>
void operator()(P1 p1, Params... parameters) {
(void)(p1); // we do this just to remove warnings -- requires the recursion
operator()(parameters...);
}
};
You was probably thinking about the identity function (std::identity and apparently it's removed in the current draft) that is not the same thing though.