lol, well, a lot of things use legacy code and I guess you don't want to break interop with it, so if you need it that way, then that's the way it's gotta be
but if you don't have legacy code to deal with, then std::vector is good no?
@Drahakar Unless you have a clear requirement that calls for a very specific container (e.g. sometimes an std::map is obviously the container to use), std::vector and std::deque are the containers that are usually advocated.
Someone once told me that memory copying is fast on Intel processors so you don't need to worry too much about performance when copying strings and vectors. I don't kow if this is true though.
@TonyTheTiger it also can not contain duplicates. which is handy sometimes. For example you can push 10 elements into a set and then ask its length. If the length < 10 then it means you had duplicates.
If you have a std::set then all items are scattered throughout memory when using the default allocator. If you use a pool allocator then the elements will be neatly together in a single chunk of memory.
well, I've read that for example doing lots of allocations in a multi threaded program can be a source of contention, as the heap internally holds mutexes while doing an allocation, so perhaps this kind of thing would be a place for a custom allocator?
@TonyTheTiger If multiple threads access the same std::set object then you need to lock before accessing it anyway. That will be your source of contention.
@StackedCrooked true, but that could be resolved by using another data structure, where mutexes would be held for less amounts of time, like a linked list. That is if the data structure needs a lot of inserts/removals done from multiple threads. Searching is another thing entirely
@RMartinhoFernandes afaik a call to new will cause the heap to be locked, so no other thread can then call new so if that's done lots, it could be a trouble spot
I did some experiments with this Pool class. It is a compromise between a humble linear allocator and a stack. (Disclaimer: experimental, don't start bashing me :D)
@RMartinhoFernandes If have infinite opportunities to do that of my colleages' code at work. However, that would make me the most hated employee there.