std::experimental::simd_abi::deduce
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    < cpp | experimental | simd
                    
                                                            
                    | Defined in header  <experimental/simd> | ||
| template < class T, std::size_t N, class ...Abis > struct deduce; | (parallelism TS v2) | |
The type deduce<T, N, Abis...>::type is present if and only if:
- T is a vectorizable type,
- simd_abi::fixed_size<N> is supported, and
- every type in Abis... is an ABI tag
Let DA denote deduce<T, N, Abis...>::type when it presents, then
- simd_size_v<T, DA> == N
- simd<T, DA> is default constructible, i.e. it is supported
-  DAissimd_abi::scalarif N==1, otherwise it is implementation-defined
Member types
| Name | Definition | 
| type | an ABI tag type suitable for specified element type Tand sizeN | 
Helper types
| template < class T, std::size_t N, class ...Abis > using deduce_t = typename deduce<T, N, Abis...>::type; | (parallelism TS v2) | |
Notes
simd_abi::deduce is SFINAE-friendly.
The ABI tag deduced via this facility is a Quality-of-Implementation feature. A simple implementation might simply return fixed_size<N> unconditionally. An optimized implementation might return an implementation-defined extended ABI tag for most inputs. Consequently, if you need an ABI tag for a certain number of elements, use fixed_size if ABI stability is of concern, and prefer deduce_t otherwise.
Example
| This section is incomplete Reason: no example | 
See also
| (parallelism TS v2) | tag type for storing a single element (typedef) | 
| (parallelism TS v2) | tag type for storing specified number of elements (alias template) | 
| (parallelism TS v2) | tag type that ensures ABI compatibility (alias template) | 
| (parallelism TS v2) | tag type that is most efficient (alias template) |