enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Placement syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placement_syntax

    This is why the pointer placement delete functions are defined as no-operations by the Standard C++ library. Since the pointer placement new functions do not allocate any storage, there is no storage to [ 16 ] be deallocated in the event of the object's constructor throwing an exception.

  3. C++11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C++11

    In C++11, a move constructor of std::vector<T> that takes an rvalue reference to an std::vector<T> can copy the pointer to the internal C-style array out of the rvalue into the new std::vector<T>, then set the pointer inside the rvalue to null. Since the temporary will never again be used, no code will try to access the null pointer, and ...

  4. C++20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C++20

    std::to_address to convert a pointer to a raw pointer [42] calendar and time-zone additions to <chrono> [43] std::span, providing a view to a contiguous array (analogous to std::string_view but span can mutate the referenced sequence) [44] std::erase and std::erase_if, simplifying element erasure for most standard containers [45] <version ...

  5. Smart pointer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_pointer

    Smart pointers can facilitate intentional programming by expressing, in the type, how the memory of the referent of the pointer will be managed. For example, if a C++ function returns a pointer, there is no way to know whether the caller should delete the memory of the referent when the caller is finished with the information.

  6. Allocator (C++) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allocator_(C++)

    An allocator, A, for objects of type T must have a member function with the signature A:: pointer A:: allocate (size_type n, A < void >:: const_pointer hint = 0). This function returns a pointer to the first element of a newly allocated array large enough to contain n objects of type T; only the

  7. Type punning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_punning

    Where "new" is the standard routine in Pascal for allocating memory for a pointer, and "hex" is presumably a routine to print the hexadecimal string describing the value of an integer. This would allow the display of the address of a pointer, something which is not normally permitted. (Pointers cannot be read or written, only assigned.)

  8. Forward declaration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forward_declaration

    In C++, classes can be forward-declared if you only need to use the pointer-to-that-class type (since all object pointers are the same size, and this is what the compiler cares about). This is especially useful inside class definitions, e.g. if a class contains a member that is a pointer (or a reference) to another class.

  9. auto_ptr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_ptr

    In the C++ programming language, auto_ptr is an obsolete smart pointer class template that was available in previous versions of the C++ standard library (declared in the <memory> header file), which provides some basic RAII features for C++ raw pointers. It has been replaced by the unique_ptr class.