Usually when you're compiling something, you know more about what you're starting with than what you want to have. So it makes more sense to throw a bunch of data at the compiler, than to ask the user to request exactly as much data as there is, or worry about an end-of-iterator value…
I'm finding this an interesting problem, since I tried to design a compiler framework back in high school. So it's a bit of perspective on my problem-solving skill development.
It helps to have a language which allows you to arbitrarily specify a member object and perfectly forward its constructor arguments, too ;v)
> error: cannot bind bitfield 'x.X::bitfield' to 'int&'
The bitfield is an lvalue so I'm not sure how and where it should be special cased to enable the conversion.
Heh, probably next to functions?
— If the initializer expression
— is an xvalue, class prvalue, array prvalue or function lvalue and “cv1 T1” is reference-
compatible with “cv2 T2”, or
— has a class type [...]
I guess 'bitfield lvalue' could be slipped in there
Also, notice how array prvalues are part of the languages!
Guess I'm kinda on the fence on that. It would bug me if I wanted that feature (which is very possible), but the language is definitely cleaner without that decay mode.
When catching an exception the standard guidance is to throw by value, catch by reference. As I understand it, this is for two reasons:
If the exception was thrown due to an out of memory exception, we won't call a copy constructor which could potentially terminate the program.
If the exception...
Well, catch by value should be just as safe as the copy constructor. And since throwing uses copy-init, the copy constructor of an exception better be quite safe...
It would be a very special case, since an object thrown from the same function would be subject to copy elision, but an object from up the call stack would seem to need to go through the whole rigmarole.
Yeah, even all within the same function you can still restore the original by rethrow. So I think copy elision (by the as-if rule) would be a very hard optimization to apply.
You have to make sure that no functions called within the catch block can rethrow… which is essentially the same as everything being noexcept.
terminate is getting called because of a throw during stack unwinding… since the copy constructor in question isn't constructing the exception object, what I said before doesn't apply.
The throw apparently has set the exception object to int before terminate gets called, so you see that error message.
Probably just a QOI issue in the terminate error message printer, but I don't think it's UB.
Huh, C++03 allows an inline friend definition of a function template within a class template. I thought that was just C++11. Add that to the list of pathological ADL cases.
@Potatoswatter I clarified that what I wanted to know what it was initialized from (which is an lvalue).
@Potatoswatter I'm referring to the text of 15.3/16 (that you've pointed me to) which applies to the object in the handler, not the active exception.
> If the exception-declaration denotes an object type but does not specify a name, a temporary (12.2) is copy-initialized (8.5) from the exception object.
So
Does that mean that there is copy elision elision in C++?
'Elide copy elision if it would otherwise mean changing the semantics of an exception handler!'
Copy elision applies to initializing the exception object, which is a temporary, but which the language essentially const_casts for you into an lvalue.
The paragraph makes two cases not for the copy initialization, but to make one of the case a temporary.
That would actually help with the other question actually: pass by value can be optimized to nothing assuming non-pathological constructors/destructors.
@TonyTheLion IIRC you have to restore the old buffer or whatever before the program shutdowns but apart from that caveat the rdbuf member is available to do that.
I completely forgot how strtok works, other than "It calls forth Shub-Niggurath, The Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young, Wife of the Not-to-Be-Named One, and devours your children."
You call it first with the string and the delimiter and you get the first piece. And then you call it with NULL instead of the string, and it gives you the next piece.