//[ Calc1 // Copyright 2008 Eric Niebler. Distributed under the Boost // Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file // LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) // // This is a simple example of how to build an arithmetic expression // evaluator with placeholders. #include #include #include namespace proto = boost::proto; using proto::_; template struct placeholder {}; // Define some placeholders proto::terminal< placeholder< 1 > >::type const _1 = {{}}; proto::terminal< placeholder< 2 > >::type const _2 = {{}}; // Define a calculator context, for evaluating arithmetic expressions struct calculator_context : proto::callable_context< calculator_context const > { // The values bound to the placeholders double d[2]; // The result of evaluating arithmetic expressions typedef double result_type; explicit calculator_context(double d1 = 0., double d2 = 0.) { d[0] = d1; d[1] = d2; } // Handle the evaluation of the placeholder terminals template double operator ()(proto::tag::terminal, placeholder) const { return d[ I - 1 ]; } }; template double evaluate( Expr const &expr, double d1 = 0., double d2 = 0. ) { // Create a calculator context with d1 and d2 substituted for _1 and _2 calculator_context const ctx(d1, d2); // Evaluate the calculator expression with the calculator_context return proto::eval(expr, ctx); } int main() { // Displays "5" std::cout << evaluate( _1 + 2.0, 3.0 ) << std::endl; // Displays "6" std::cout << evaluate( _1 * _2, 3.0, 2.0 ) << std::endl; // Displays "0.5" std::cout << evaluate( (_1 - _2) / _2, 3.0, 2.0 ) << std::endl; return 0; } //]