std::expected<T,E>::and_then
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    
                    
                                                            
                    |   Main template  | 
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template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) &;  | 
(1) | (since C++23) | 
|   template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) const&;  | 
(2) | (since C++23) | 
template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) &&;  | 
(3) | (since C++23) | 
|   template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) const&&;  | 
(4) | (since C++23) | 
|   void partial specialization  | 
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template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) &;  | 
(5) | (since C++23) | 
|   template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) const&;  | 
(6) | (since C++23) | 
template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) &&;  | 
(7) | (since C++23) | 
|   template< class F > constexpr auto and_then( F&& f ) const&&;  | 
(8) | (since C++23) | 
If *this represents an expected value, invokes f and returns its result. Otherwise, returns a std::expected object that contains an unexpected value, which is initialized with the unexpected value of *this.
5-8) f is invoked without any argument.
Given type U as:
5-8) std::remove_cvref_t<std::invoke_result_t<F>>
If U is not a specialization of std::expected, or std::is_same_v<U::error_type, E> is false, the program is ill-formed.
1,2) These overloads participate in overload resolution only if std::is_constructible_v<E, decltype(error())> is true.
3,4) These overloads participate in overload resolution only if std::is_constructible_v<E, decltype(std::move(error()))> is true.
5,6) These overloads participate in overload resolution only if std::is_constructible_v<E, decltype(error())> is true.
7,8) These overloads participate in overload resolution only if std::is_constructible_v<E, decltype(std::move(error()))> is true.
Parameters
| f | - | a suitable function or Callable object that returns a std::expected | 
Return value
| Overload | Value of has_value()
 | |
|---|---|---|
| true | false | |
| (1,2) | std::invoke(std::forward<F>(f), val)
 | 
U(std::unexpect, error()) | 
| (3,4) | std::invoke(std::forward<F>(f),std::move(val))
 | 
U(std::unexpect, std::move(error())) | 
| (5,6) | std::invoke(std::forward<F>(f)) | U(std::unexpect, error()) | 
| (7,8) | U(std::unexpect, std::move(error())) | |
Notes
| Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature | 
|---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_expected | 
202211L | (C++23) | Monadic functions for std::expected
 | 
Example
| This section is incomplete Reason: no example  | 
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior | 
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 3938 | C++23 | the expected value was obtained by value()[1] | changed to **this | 
| LWG 3973 | C++23 | the expected value was obtained by **this[2] | changed to val
 | 
- ↑ 
value()requiresEto be copy constructible (see LWG issue 3843), whereoperator*does not. - ↑ **this can trigger argument-dependent lookup.
 
See also
|   (C++23)  | 
 in-place construction tag for unexpected value in expected(tag)  | 
  returns an expected containing the transformed expected value if it exists; otherwise, returns the expected itself (public member function)  |