There is a (compiler specific) way to test whether a type is in a certain namespace, but I'll let you decide whether it is better than yours or not:
#include <utility>
#include <type_traits>
namespace helper
{
class ctstring
{
public:
constexpr ctstring(const char* string) : _string(string)
{
}
constexpr const char* c_str() const
{
return _string;
}
constexpr bool begins_with(const ctstring other) const
{
return !*other.c_str() ||
(*_string && *_string == *other.c_str() &&
ctstring(_string + 1).begins_with(other.c_str() + 1));
}
private:
const char* _string;
};
template <typename T>
constexpr bool is_type_in_namespace(const ctstring name)
{
#if defined(_MSC_VER)
#define PRETTY_FUNCTION_OFFSET_1
(sizeof("void __cdecl helper::is_type_in_namespace<struct ") - 1)
#define PRETTY_FUNCTION_OFFSET_2
(sizeof("void __cdecl helper::is_type_in_namespace<class ") - 1)
return ctstring(__FUNCSIG__ + PRETTY_FUNCTION_OFFSET_1).begins_with(name) ||
ctstring(__FUNCSIG__ + PRETTY_FUNCTION_OFFSET_2).begins_with(name);
#undef PRETTY_FUNCTION_OFFSET_1
#undef PRETTY_FUNCTION_OFFSET_2
#elif defined(__clang__)
return ctstring(__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ +
(sizeof("bool helper::is_type_in_namespace(const "
"helper::ctstring) [T = ") -
1))
.begins_with(name);
#elif defined(__GNUC__)
return ctstring(__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ +
(sizeof("constexpr bool "
"helper::is_type_in_namespace(helper::ctstring) "
"[with T = ") -
1))
.begins_with(name);
#else
#error "Your compiler is not supported, yet."
#endif
}
}
// -- Test it
namespace sample
{
struct True_X;
class True_Y;
template <typename>
class True_T;
template <typename A>
using True_U = True_T<A>;
}
struct False_X;
class False_Y;
template <typename>
class False_T;
template <typename A>
using False_U = False_T<A>;
void test1()
{
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<sample::True_X>("sample::"), "1");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<sample::True_Y>("sample::"), "2");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<sample::True_T<int>>("sample::"), "3");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<sample::True_U<int>>("sample::"), "4");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<False_X>("sample::"), "5");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<False_Y>("sample::"), "6");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<False_T<int>>("sample::"), "7");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<False_U<int>>("sample::"), "8");
}
namespace sample
{
void test2()
{
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_X>("sample::"), "1");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_Y>("sample::"), "2");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_T<int>>("sample::"), "3");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_U<int>>("sample::"), "4");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_X>("sample::"), "5");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_Y>("sample::"), "6");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_T<int>>("sample::"), "7");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_U<int>>("sample::"), "8");
}
namespace inner
{
void test3()
{
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<::sample::True_X>("sample::"), "1");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<::sample::True_Y>("sample::"), "2");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<::sample::True_T<int>>("sample::"), "3");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<::sample::True_U<int>>("sample::"), "4");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_X>("sample::"), "5");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_Y>("sample::"), "6");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_T<int>>("sample::"), "7");
static_assert(!helper::is_type_in_namespace<::False_U<int>>("sample::"), "8");
}
}
}
void test4()
{
using namespace sample;
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_X>("sample::"), "1");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_Y>("sample::"), "2");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_T<int>>("sample::"), "3");
static_assert(helper::is_type_in_namespace<True_U<int>>("sample::"), "4");
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
test1();
sample::test2();
sample::inner::test3();
test4();
return 0;
}
I tested this for MSVC2015 and some random online Clang compiler and GCC 6.1.0.
Thoughts:
- The test accepts classes and structs from namespace sample and any sub-namespace.
- It doesn't suffer the drawbacks of your solution
- You might want to build in std::decay_t to remove CV qualifiers.
- Obviously the code requires >=C++14 Edit: Not any more, C++11 is enough
- Nobody likes macros Edit: Removed most macros
- The code isn't very portable and most likely needs additional branches for certain compilers and compiler versions. It is up to your requirements if the solution is acceptable
Edit: Refactored code to make it more clear and added GCC support. Also, the namespace to test for can now be passed as a parameter
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