Discussion on answer by Maxim Egorushkin: Why can a T* be passed in register, but a unique_ptr<T> cannot?

Discussion on answer by Maxim Egorush

Imported from a comment discussion on https://stackoverflow.com/questions/58339165/why-can-a-t-be-passed-in-register-but-a-unique-ptrt-cannot/58340952#58340952
1893d ago – Justin Time
26
3

export all events for this room

Starred posts

Oct 14, 2019 22:57
@einpoklum: In the ISO C++ standard, every object has an address. The register keyword used to let you declare that certain objects didn't need to have an address, and could be kept in registers. (Still actually works for C debug builds, like gcc -O0). But that doesn't change the calling convention when used on function args. Not to mention that the constructor gets called with a this pointer. The as-if rule is what allows optimizing away the addresses of some objects and keeping them in registers. So it's up to the optimizer and/or calling convention.