std::tuple_element<std::tuple>
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    
                    
                                                            
                    |   Defined in header  <tuple>
  | 
||
|   template< std::size_t I, class T > class tuple_element; /* undefined */  | 
(1) | (since C++11) | 
|   template< std::size_t I, class... Types > class tuple_element< I, tuple<Types...> >;  | 
(2) | (since C++11) | 
|   Defined in header  <tuple>
  | 
||
|   Defined in header  <array>
  | 
(since C++17)  | 
|
|   Defined in header  <utility>
  | 
(since C++17)  | 
|
|   Defined in header  <ranges>
  | 
(since C++20)  | 
|
|   Defined in header  <span>
  | 
(since C++20)  | 
|
|   template< std::size_t I, class T > class tuple_element< I, const T > {  | 
(3) | (since C++11) | 
|   template< std::size_t I, class T > class tuple_element< I, volatile T > {  | 
(4) | (since C++11) | 
|   template< std::size_t I, class T > class tuple_element< I, const volatile T > {  | 
(5) | (since C++11) | 
Provides compile-time indexed access to the types of the elements of the tuple.
Member types
| Member type | Definition | 
| type |   the type of Ith element of the tuple, where I is in [0, sizeof...(Types))
 | 
Helper types
|   template <std::size_t I, class T> using tuple_element_t = typename tuple_element<I, T>::type;  | 
(since C++14) | |
Possible implementation
template< std::size_t I, class T > struct tuple_element; // recursive case template< std::size_t I, class Head, class... Tail > struct tuple_element<I, std::tuple<Head, Tail...>> : std::tuple_element<I-1, std::tuple<Tail...>> { }; // base case template< class Head, class... Tail > struct tuple_element<0, std::tuple<Head, Tail...>> { typedef Head type; };  | 
Example
Run this code
#include <iostream> #include <tuple> template <class... Args> struct type_list { template <std::size_t N> using type = typename std::tuple_element<N, std::tuple<Args...>>::type; }; int main() { std::cout << std::boolalpha; type_list<int, char, bool>::type<2> x = true; std::cout << x << '\n'; }
Output:
true
See also
  obtains the type of the elements of array  (class template specialization)  | |
   obtains the type of the elements of pair  (class template specialization)  |