std::experimental::ranges::greater_equal
| Defined in header  <experimental/ranges/functional> | ||
| template< class T = void >     requires StrictTotallyOrdered<T> || | (ranges TS) | |
| template <> struct greater_equal<void>; | (ranges TS) | |
Function object for performing comparisons. The primary template invokes operator< on const lvalues of type T and negates the result. The specialization greater_equal<void> deduces the parameter types of the function call operator from the arguments (but not the return type).
All specializations of greater_equal are Semiregular.
Member types
| Member type | Definition | 
| is_transparent(member only ofgreater_equal<void>specialization) | /* unspecified */ | 
Member functions
| operator() | checks if the first argument is greater than or equal to the second (public member function) | 
std::experimental::ranges::greater_equal::operator()
| constexpr bool operator()(const T& x, const T& y) const; | (1) | (member only of primary greater_equal<T>template) | 
| template< class T, class U >     requires StrictTotallyOrderedWith<T, U> || | (2) | (member only of greater_equal<void>specialization) | 
t and u. Equivalent to return !ranges::less<>{}(std::forward<T>(t), std::forward<U>(u));.
Notes
Unlike std::greater_equal, ranges::greater_equal requires all six comparison operators <, <=, >, >=, == and != to be valid (via the StrictTotallyOrdered and StrictTotallyOrderedWith constraints) and is entirely defined in terms of 
ranges::less. However, the implementation is free to use operator>= directly, because those concepts require the results of the comparison operators to be consistent.
Example
| This section is incomplete Reason: no example | 
See also
| function object implementing x >= y (class template) |