Structured bindings

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C++17 introduces structured bindings, which makes it even easier to deal with multiple return types, as you do not need to rely upon std::tie() or do any manual tuple unpacking:

std::map<std::string, int> m;

// insert an element into the map and check if insertion succeeded
auto [iterator, success] = m.insert({"Hello", 42});

if (success) {
    // your code goes here
}

// iterate over all elements without having to use the cryptic 'first' and 'second' names
for (auto const& [key, value] : m) {
    std::cout << "The value for " << key << " is " << value << '\n';
}

Structured bindings can be used by default with std::pair, std::tuple, and any type whose non-static data members are all either public direct members or members of an unambiguous base class:

struct A { int x; };
struct B : A { int y; };
B foo();

// with structured bindings
const auto [x, y] = foo();

// equivalent code without structured bindings
const auto result = foo();
auto& x = result.x;
auto& y = result.y;

If you make your type “tuple-like” it will also automatically work with your type. A tuple-like is a type with appropriate tuple_size, tuple_element and get written:

namespace my_ns {
    struct my_type {
        int x;
        double d;
        std::string s;
    };
    struct my_type_view {
        my_type* ptr;
    };
}

namespace std {
    template<>
    struct tuple_size<my_ns::my_type_view> : std::integral_constant<std::size_t, 3>
    {};

    template<> struct tuple_element<my_ns::my_type_view, 0>{ using type = int; };
    template<> struct tuple_element<my_ns::my_type_view, 1>{ using type = double; };
    template<> struct tuple_element<my_ns::my_type_view, 2>{ using type = std::string; };
}

namespace my_ns {
    template<std::size_t I>
    decltype(auto) get(my_type_view const& v) {
        if constexpr (I == 0)
            return v.ptr->x;
        else if constexpr (I == 1)
            return v.ptr->d;
        else if constexpr (I == 2)
            return v.ptr->s;
        static_assert(I < 3, "Only 3 elements");
    }
}

now this works:

my_ns::my_type t{1, 3.14, "hello world"};

my_ns::my_type_view foo() {
    return {&t};
}

int main() {
    auto[x, d, s] = foo();
    std::cout << x << ',' << d << ',' << s << '\n';
}

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Returning multiple values from a function:
* Structured bindings

Table Of Contents
8 Arrays
11 Loops
39 Streams
42 Returning multiple values from a function
51 Unions
56 Lambdas
60 SFINAE
62 RAII
67 Sorting
84 RTTI
87 Scopes
104 Profiling
107 Recursion
117 Iteration
125 Alignment
134 Semaphore
136 Debugging
139 Mutexes
142 decltype