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Q: Why does map not include out_of_range?

CreepsyConsider the following code that doesn't compile: #include <map> //#include <stdexcept> // uncommenting this works int main() { std::map<int, int> test; try { test.at(10); } catch(std::out_of_range& e) { } return 0; } Why does std::map not include std::out_of_ran...

It might compile without the header and it might not. Any implementation is free to #include <stdexcept> in <map>, just as it is free not to.
please clarify if the code as is does compile or not.
in the current state, g++ gives me an error when I compile it
@largest_prime_is_463035818 no, the code doesn't compile because it can't find the type std::out_of_range.
The symbol std::out_of_range is declared in #include <stdexcept>. Your code should include the headers for the symbols it uses. Which is why it may not work if you omit including the header (the may part is because some other header may indirectly include the header your code is dependent upon).
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it doesn't have to include it, though interesting question how it manages without doing so given that map is a template
If true that the standard allows this: Why?
Are you specifying --std=c++11 (or greater)?
@davidbak You don't necessarily need to know about standard exceptions where you use map. You may only need them elsewhere, higher in the callstack, where you can manage an exception. No need to force the compiler to parse headers you don't need.
@FrançoisAndrieux - std::exception isn't just "useful" with std::map - it is part of the specification of std::map! Is it also ok for a <map> header to not include a decl for std::pair? I'm very surprised.
@largest_prime_is_463035818 • if all the implementation is in namespace std { namespace detail { ... }} and then pulled into std via namespace std { using ::std::detail::map; }} that would allow exposing select symbols without "polluting" with other implementation detail symbols.
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@davidbak Technically it is okay. Edit : Though in practice I doubt it is possible.
So, yeah: no compilation error if the appropriate C++ standard is specified. I'd be more interested in how .at is defined when compiling pre-C++11 code. Is there an older definition?
@FrançoisAndrieux - So technically all my code that #includes <map> is actually not portable by the standard since I don't also include utility, memory_resource, stdexcept, iterator if I happen to use map::at and map::reverse_iterator? Very unexpected.
@Tommy I don't think there was a change in the specification and what you see is just implementation details leaking. The simple rule of thumb is: Include what you use.
@largest_prime_is_463035818 on the contrary, the current definition of at was introduced in C++11. My rule of thumb is: look things up.
@largest_prime_is_463035818 - but throwing std::out_of_range is not an "implementation detail" - it is part of the specification of std::map! An implementation detail leaking would be if some implementation of std::unordered_map needed you to #include vector because it used vectors to implement buckets though vector appears nowhere in the specification of unordered_map.
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@Tommy compile with gcc10 as C++14 and the error is back: godbolt.org/z/onP9rG. What I meant is that nothing has changed with respect to <map> needing to include out_of_range or not. Include what you use, if you don't you are relying on implementation details
It compiles with gcc 9.3.0: wandbox.org/permlink/tuNtV0rFUMId7SLl, but does not with gcc 10.1.0: wandbox.org/permlink/CYRiZRt7YHYY5SI7.
@davidbak It may be unexpected and unfortunate, but this has always been true. You often get away without having to #include everything because the standard library is heavily templated and leaks a lot of implementation details. Though technically, if map didn't leak any details, you still wouldn't always necessarily need all those headers. Not every interface function needs pair. You can add, find and remove elements without ever mentioning std::pair.
@davidbak I'm unclear why that comment is directed at me. Was it for Eljay?
Fine. I accept that this is the state of things. It is very odd to me that you guys are both talking about implementation detail instead of recognizing that it is part of the specification of map, but I guess that's how the standard treats it. I accept things but I am still damn surprised.
@Tommy - yes, sorry, fixed!
@davidbak The reason the headers are exposed is because they are required by the implementation, which is exposed due to being templated. Those types are indeed part of the specification, but the reason they are provided automatically is because they are also used in the exposed implementation details. std::pair is both part of the std::map specification and is used in implementation details.
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@FrançoisAndrieux - I understand about definitions of template code needing to be present, not just decls. I don't get why it is an "implementation detail" that the defn of map::at uses std::out_of_range when the standard tells you it does and why it does!. But I concede that you have to #include <stdexcept> when you use map::at. And I guess I'll start #including <stdexcept> when I use string::at, too, etc. etc. And I look forward to discovering other such surprises as well in other std library headers ... Yep.

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