class template
<functional>
std::binary_function
template <class Arg1, class Arg2, class Result> struct binary_function;
 
template <class Arg1, class Arg2, class Result> struct binary_function; // deprecated
 
 
Binary function object base class
Note: This class has been deprecated in C++11.
This is a base class for standard binary function objects.
Generically, function objects are instances of a class with member function operator() defined. This member function allows the object to be used with the same syntax as a regular function call, and therefore its type can be used as template parameter when a generic function type is expected.
In the case of binary function objects, this operator() member function takes two parameters.
binary_function is just a base class, from which specific binary function objects are derived. It has no operator() member defined (which derived classes are expected to define) - it simply has three public data members that are typedefs of the template parameters. It is defined as:
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 | template <class Arg1, class Arg2, class Result>
  struct binary_function {
    typedef Arg1 first_argument_type;
    typedef Arg2 second_argument_type;
    typedef Result result_type;
  };
 | 
Members
| member type | definition | notes | 
|---|
| first_argument_type | The first template parameter (Arg1) | Type of the first argument in member operator() | 
| second_argument_type | The second template parameter (Arg2) | Type of the second argument in member operator() | 
| return_type | The third template parameter (Result) | Type returned by member operator() | 
Example
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 | // binary_function example
#include <iostream>     // std::cout, std::cin
#include <functional>   // std::binary_function
struct Compare : public std::binary_function<int,int,bool> {
  bool operator() (int a, int b) {return (a==b);}
};
int main () {
  Compare Compare_object;
  Compare::first_argument_type input1;
  Compare::second_argument_type input2;
  Compare::result_type result;
  std::cout << "Please enter first number: ";
  std::cin >> input1;
  std::cout << "Please enter second number: ";
  std::cin >> input2;
  result = Compare_object (input1,input2);
  std::cout << "Numbers " << input1 << " and " << input2;
  if (result)
	  std::cout << " are equal.\n";
  else
	  std::cout << " are not equal.\n";
  return 0;
}
 | 
Possible output:
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Please enter first number: 2
Please enter second number: 33
Numbers 2 and 33 are not equal.
 | 
See also
- unary_function
- Unary function object base class (class template
)