I’m currently on Boost 1.56 so this might have been fixed by now, but in a simple test Boost.Coroutine fails to properly model the InputIterator concept, because *it++ does not conform to the operational semantics { T
tmp = *it; ++it; return tmp; } required by the standard.
The failing program:
#include <boost/coroutine/asymmetric_coroutine.hpp>
#include <iostream>
template<typename Continuation>
auto foo(Continuation && yield) -> void
{
yield("Hello");
yield(", ");
yield("World");
yield("!\n");
}
//using T = char const *;
using T = std::string;
auto foo() -> boost::coroutines::asymmetric_coroutine<T>::pull_type
{
using namespace boost::coroutines;
return asymmetric_coroutine<T>::pull_type{
[](asymmetric_coroutine<T>::push_type& yield) { foo(yield); }
};
}
auto main(int, char **) -> int
{
auto f = foo();
for(auto it = boost::begin(f); it != boost::end(f);)
std::cout << *it++;
}
Which (on my machine) outputs:
, World!
X☺à r2 ` , ` , Ç2 Ç
Failing to model the InputIterator concept is bad, because then it isn’t any kind of standards-conforming iterator at all. Interestingly, if T is char const * and not std::string the program
works as expected. Is there some other subtle bug at work here?
--
Johannes S. Mueller-Roemer, MSc
Wiss. Mitarbeiter - Interactive Engineering Technologies (IET)
Fraunhofer-Institut für Graphische Datenverarbeitung IGD
Fraunhoferstr. 5 | 64283 Darmstadt | Germany
Tel +49 6151 155-606 | Fax +49 6151 155-139
johannes.mueller-roemer@igd.fraunhofer.de | www.igd.fraunhofer.de