Alt text:
A screenshot from the linked article titled “Reflection in C++26”, showing reflection as one of the bullet points listed in the “Core Language” section
A screenshot from the linked article titled “Reflection in C++26”, showing reflection as one of the bullet points listed in the “Core Language” section
I imagine reflections would make the process more straightforward, requires expressions are powerful but either somewhat verbose or possibly incomplete.
For instance, in your example
foo
could have any of the following declarations in a class:void foo();
int foo() const;
template <typename T> foo(T = { }) &&;
decltype([]() { }) foo;
I’m not sure if there’s anything
enable_if
can do that concepts can’t do somewhat better but yeah there’s definitely a lot of subtleties that reflection is going to make nicer or possible in the first placeOh,
std::enable_if
is straight up worse, they’re unreadable and don’t work when two function overloads (idk about variables) have the same signature.I’m not even sure enable_if can do something that constraints can’t at all…