myclass (unsigned int param) : param_ (param)
This construct is called a Member Initializer List in C++.
It initializes your member param_ to a value param.
What is the difference between Initializing And Assignment inside constructor? &
What is the advantage?
There is a difference b...
@RMartinhoFernandes If you pass an rvalue and the type can't be moved, yes. If you pass an rvalue it can be a move, too. If you pass an lvalue then no, it goes through unchanged.
@Als When you initialize fields via initializer list the constructors will be called once.
If you use the assignment then the fields will be first initialized with default constructors and then reassigned (via assignment operator) with actual values.
As you see there is an additional overhead of creation & as
The constructor is always called once
whther I use assignment or not
WHy will it be reassigned, unless you do it yourself? I am confused
Fun fact: if you use a template<typename T> T&& operator=(T&&); then GCC might actually fumble on the return type and returns an rvalue ref when you pass in an lvalue.
Right. So I installed a more recent GCC snapshot and it either unbroke some of my stuff or I used some workaround and now I have the unit tests for my named parameter code working again.
I dropped the idea because the only thing you can do with a variadic macro pack is to textually expand it. So I had to do some tuple manipulation to move the names around. Too much dependency between preprocessing and actual code.
POD stands for Plain Old Data - that is, a struct (or class) with no members except data members. Wikipedia goes into a bit more detail and defines a POD in C++ as "A Plain Old Data Structure in C++ is an aggregate class that contains only PODS as members, has no user-defined destructor, no user-...
@JohannesSchaublitb i think that may help for rep (no revenge downvoting on you), but the way I think of it is that an explanation would help others, and don't care about rep.
@Als you are right might compiler complains when I try to init in the body of the constructor....I can't see it. the only reason I see was if you had a base class that initialized the reference
if it doesn't then the class itself can reference the variable in the constructor body..almost the same thing
So if I use functions like glDrawPixels it expects a pointer to a memory location holding all the pixel values. Is it a good idea to use std::vector as a wrapper around this memory?
If so how to do it, so far I was just able to produce crashes ;)
@Als Imagine I have a class Dog, and takes a reference to the dog's name. The dog has no base constructor so I can initialize either using the member initializer list or use the body of the constructor
Of course you have to understand the difference between initialization and assignment in general to see why this is important for data members in particular.
myclass (unsigned int param) : param_ (param)
This construct is called a Member Initializer List in C++.
It initializes your member param_ to a value param.
What is the difference between Initializing And Assignment inside constructor? &
What is the advantage?
There is a difference b...
Well, I don't know glut, but it has a C API, right? So every function call should either return an error code or set a global error variable. Have you checked them everywhere? If you don't check, 10 lines later you may get a weird crash.
@LewsTherin For user-defined types, initialization means "invoking a constructor" to put an object into existence, whereas assignment means "calling the assignment operator" to change an already existing object.
When I was 10.. rubber meant eraser,ass meant donkey,gay meant happy,straight meant linear,making out meant 'logical detection',Cock meant rooster,pussy meant cat, stag meant a male deer, prick meant a jab, poke meant a nudge, chick meant a baby hen, screw meant a carpenter's implement anda Tit was always for Tat!! Damnmm !!!! English has changed so much !!!!! :p (found on net)
@Als, I know it doesn't..which is why I am asking why it demands initializing a reference variable using a member initializers list instead of the body...and i doubt it is because of efficiency
@LewsTherin Because it is impossible to initialize data members inside the constructor body.
When you say ref = foo; that's assignment, not initialization. It assigns to the object reffered to by the reference. It does not assign to the reference itself.