// until C++20 bool operator!=(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept; // (1) template<typename ScalarType> bool operator!=(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept; // (2) template<typename ScalarType> bool operator!=(ScalarType lhs, const const_reference rhs) noexcept; // (2) // since C++20 class basic_json { bool operator!=(const_reference rhs) const noexcept; // (1) template<typename ScalarType> bool operator!=(ScalarType rhs) const noexcept; // (2) };
Compares two JSON values for inequality. Returns #!cpp !(lhs == rhs) (until C++20) or #!cpp !(*this == rhs) (since C++20).
operator==, including for special values like NaN and discarded.Compares a JSON value and a scalar or a scalar and a JSON value for inequality by converting the scalar to a JSON value and comparing both JSON values according to 1.
ScalarType : a scalar type according to std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value
lhs (in) : first value to consider
rhs (in) : second value to consider
whether the values lhs/*this and rhs are not equal
No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions.
Linear.
!!! note “Comparing NaN and discarded”
Since `operator!=` is defined as `!(a == b)`, the behavior for special values follows that of `operator==`: - For `NaN` values: `NaN == NaN` yields `#!cpp false`, so `NaN != NaN` yields `#!cpp true`. - For `discarded` values: `discarded == x` yields `#!cpp false` for any `x`, so `discarded != x` yields `#!cpp true`.
??? example
The example demonstrates comparing several JSON types.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/operator__notequal.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/operator__notequal.output"
```
??? example
The example demonstrates comparing several JSON types against the null pointer (JSON `#!json null`).
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/operator__notequal__nullptr_t.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/operator__notequal__nullptr_t.output"
```
NaN and discarded values; operator!= now consistently means !(a == b).NaN and discarded values; operator!= now consistently means !(a == b).