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Concepts

This chapter enumerates all the user-facing concepts in the mp-units library.

Dimension<T>

Dimension concept matches a dimension of either a base or derived quantity:

All of the above dimensions have to be marked as final.

DimensionOf<T, V>

DimensionOf concept is satisfied when both arguments satisfy a Dimension concept and when they compare equal.

QuantitySpec<T>

QuantitySpec concept matches all the quantity specifications including:

All of the above quantity specifications have to be marked as final.

QuantitySpecOf<T, V>

QuantitySpecOf concept is satisfied when both arguments satisfy a QuantitySpec concept and when T is implicitly convertible to V.

More details

Additionally:

Those additional conditions are required to make the following work:

static_assert(ReferenceOf<si::radian, isq::angular_measure>);
static_assert(!ReferenceOf<si::radian, dimensionless>);
static_assert(!ReferenceOf<isq::angular_measure[si::radian], dimensionless>);
static_assert(ReferenceOf<one, isq::angular_measure>);
static_assert(!ReferenceOf<dimensionless[one], isq::angular_measure>);

Unit<T>

Unit concept matches all the units in the library including:

  • Base units defined by a user by inheriting from the named_unit class template instantiated with a unique symbol identifier describing this unit in a specific system of units.
  • Named scaled units defined by a user by inheriting from the named_unit class template instantiated with a unique symbol identifier and a product of multiplying another unit with some magnitude.
  • Prefixed units defined by a user by inheriting from the prefixed_unit class template instantiated with a prefix symbol, a magnitude, and a unit to be prefixed.
  • Derived named units defined by a user by inheriting from the named_unit class template instantiated with a unique symbol identifier and a result of unit equation passed as an argument.
  • Derived unnamed units being a result of a unit equations on other units.

All of the above units have to be marked as final.

Note

In the mp-units library, physical constants are also implemented as units.

AssociatedUnit<T>

AssociatedUnit concept describes a unit with an associated quantity and is satisfied by:

  • All units derived from a named_unit class template instantiated with a unique symbol identifier and a QuantitySpec of a quantity kind.
  • All units being a result of unit equations on other associated units.
Examples

All units in the SI have associated quantities. For example, si::second is specified to measure isq::time.

Natural units typically do not have an associated quantity. For example, if we assume c = 1, a natural::second unit can be used to measure both time and length. In such case, speed would have a unit of one.

PrefixableUnit<T>

PrefixableUnit concept is satisfied by all units derived from a named_unit class template. Such units can be passed as an argument to a prefixed_unit class template.

UnitOf<T, V>

UnitOf concept is satisfied for all units T matching an AssociatedUnit concept with an associated quantity type implicitly convertible to V.

More details

Additionally, the kind of V and the kind of quantity type associated with T must be the same, or the quantity type associated with T may not be derived from the kind of V.

This condition is required to make dimensionless[si::radian] invalid as si::radian should be only used for isq::angular_measure, which is a nested quantity kind within the dimensionless quantities tree.

Reference<T>

Reference concept is satisfied by all quantity reference types. Such types provide all the meta-information required to create a Quantity. A Reference can either be:

  • An AssociatedUnit.
  • The instantiation of a reference class template with a QuantitySpec passed as the first template argument and a Unit passed as the second one.

ReferenceOf<T, V>

ReferenceOf concept is satisfied by references T which have a quantity specification that satisfies QuantitySpecOf<V> concept. |

Representation<T>

Representation concept constraints a type of a number that stores the value of a quantity.

RepresentationOf<T, Ch>

RepresentationOf concept is satisfied by all Representation types that are of a specified quantity character Ch.

A user can declare a custom representation type to be of a specific character by providing the specialization with true for one or more of the following variable templates:

  • is_scalar<T>
  • is_vector<T>
  • is_tensor<T>
Tip

If we want to use scalar types to also express vector quantities (e.g., ignoring the "direction" of the vector) the following definition can be provided to enable such a behavior:

template<class T>
  requires mp_units::is_scalar<T>
constexpr bool mp_units::is_vector<T> = true;

Quantity<T>

Quantity concept matches every quantity in the library and is satisfied by all types being or deriving from an instantiation of a quantity class template.

QuantityOf<T, V>

QuantityOf concept is satisfied by all the quantities for which a QuantitySpecOf<V> is true.

PointOrigin<T>

PointOrigin concept matches all quantity point origins in the library. It is satisfied by either:

  • All types derived from an absolute_point_origin class template.
  • All types derived from a relative_point_origin class template.

PointOriginFor<T, V>

PointOriginFor concept is satisfied by all PointOrigin types that have quantity type implicitly convertible from quantity specification V, which means that V must satisfy QuantitySpecOf<T::quantity_spec>.

Examples

si::ice_point can serve as a point origin for points of isq::Celsius_temperature because this quantity type implicitly converts to isq::thermodynamic_temperature.

However, if we define mean_sea_level in the following way:

inline constexpr struct mean_sea_level final : absolute_point_origin<isq::altitude> {} mean_sea_level;

then it can't be used as a point origin for points of isq::length or isq::width as none of them is implicitly convertible to isq::altitude:

  • not every length is an altitude,
  • width is not compatible with altitude.

QuantityPoint<T>

QuantityPoint concept is satisfied by all types being either a specialization or derived from quantity_point class template.

QuantityPointOf<T, V>

QuantityPointOf concept is satisfied by all the quantity points T that match the following value V:

V Condition
QuantitySpec The quantity point quantity specification satisfies QuantitySpecOf<V> concept.
PointOrigin The point and V have the same absolute point origin.

QuantityLike<T>

QuantityLike concept provides interoperability with other libraries and is satisfied by a type T for which an instantiation of quantity_like_traits type trait yields a valid type that provides:

  • reference static data member that matches the Reference concept,
  • rep type that matches RepresentationOf concept with the character provided in reference,
  • explicit_import static data member convertible to bool that specifies that the conversion from T to a quantity type should happen explicitly (if true),
  • explicit_export static data member convertible to bool that specifies that the conversion from a quantity type to T should happen explicitly (if true),
  • to_numerical_value(T) static member function returning a raw value of the quantity,
  • from_numerical_value(rep) static member function returning T.
Examples

This is how support for std::chrono::seconds can be provided:

template<>
struct mp_units::quantity_like_traits<std::chrono::seconds> {
  static constexpr auto reference = si::second;
  static constexpr bool explicit_import = false;
  static constexpr bool explicit_export = false;
  using rep = std::chrono::seconds::rep;

  [[nodiscard]] static constexpr rep to_numerical_value(const std::chrono::seconds& d)
  {
    return d.count();
  }

  [[nodiscard]] static constexpr std::chrono::seconds from_numerical_value(const rep& v)
  {
    return std::chrono::seconds(v);
  }
};

quantity q = 42s;
std::chrono::seconds dur = 42 * s;

QuantityPointLike<T>

QuantityPointLike concept provides interoperability with other libraries and is satisfied by a type T for which an instantiation of quantity_point_like_traits type trait yields a valid type that provides:

  • reference static data member that matches the Reference concept.
  • point_origin static data member that matches the PointOrigin concept.
  • rep type that matches RepresentationOf concept with the character provided in reference.
  • explicit_import static data member convertible to bool that specifies that the conversion from T to a quantity_point type should happen explicitly (if true),
  • explicit_export static data member convertible to bool that specifies that the conversion from a quantity_point type to T should happen explicitly (if true),
  • to_numerical_value(T) static member function returning a raw value of the quantity being the offset of the point from the origin,
  • from_numerical_value(rep) static member function returning T.
Examples

This is how support for a std::chrono::time_point of std::chrono::seconds can be provided:

template<typename C>
struct mp_units::quantity_point_like_traits<std::chrono::time_point<C, std::chrono::seconds>> {
  static constexpr auto reference = si::second;
  static constexpr struct point_origin_ final : absolute_point_origin<isq::time> {} point_origin{};
  static constexpr bool explicit_import = false;
  static constexpr bool explicit_export = false;
  using rep = std::chrono::seconds::rep;
  using T = std::chrono::time_point<C, std::chrono::seconds>;

  [[nodiscard]] static constexpr rep to_numerical_value(const T& tp)
  {
    return tp.time_since_epoch().count();
  }

  [[nodiscard]] static constexpr T from_numerical_value(const rep& v)
  {
    return T(std::chrono::seconds(v));
  }
};

quantity_point qp = time_point_cast<std::chrono::seconds>(std::chrono::system_clock::now());
std::chrono::sys_seconds q = qp + 42 * s;