Conventions Used in This Book
This book uses the following conventions:
- Constant Width
-
Used for identifiers and symbols, including all keywords. In the
language reference, constant width shows syntax elements that must be
used exactly as shown. For example, the if
keyword, parentheses, and else keyword must be
used exactly as follows:
if ( condition ) statement else statement
A function name that is followed by parentheses refers to a function
call, typically to obtain the function result. The function name
without the parentheses refers to the function in more general terms.
For example:
The empty function returns true
if the container is empty, e.g., size( ) ==
0.
- Constant Width Italic
-
Used in the language reference chapters for syntax elements that must
be replaced by your code. In the previous example, you must supply
the condition and the two
statements.
Constant Width Bold
-
Used in examples to highlight key lines, and in complex declarations
to highlight the name being declared. In some C++ declarations,
especially for templates, the name gets buried in the middle of the
declaration and can be hard to spot.
- Italic
-
Used in the language reference for nonterminal syntax elements.
Italic is also used for filenames, URLs, emphasis, and for the first
use of a technical term.
- . . .
-
Indicates statements and declarations that have been removed for the
sake of brevity and clarity. An ellipsis is also a symbol in C++, but
context and comments make it clear when an ellipsis is a language
element and when it represents omitted code.
- [first, last)
-
Indicates a range of values from first to
last, including first and
excluding last.
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This icon indicates a tip, suggestion, or general note.
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This icon indicates a warning or caution.
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This icon indicates an issue or feature that might affect the
portability of your code. In particular, some aspects of C++ are
implementation-defined, such as the size of an integer, which allows
the compiler or library author to decide what the best implementation
should be.
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