But it contradicts using shared_ptr in the first place so you can use shared_ptr<shared_ptr<T>> if you want both to keep automatic destruction and replace nodes massively.
@FerencRozsa It matters only in contexts where members depend on template arguments: template <typename Base> struct X : Base { void foo() { this->member_of_Base(); }
@FerencRozsa Some people always use this-> on members just so they can see that they are members. Others don't like to write code that doesn't do anything. There doesn't seem to be a best way. The code that I have seen tends to favor not having the this-> when not needed.
@nwp I don't think clang-tidy can (ever) remove it, because it may alter the meaning depending on the context in which it occurs?
I have bad experience with clang-modernize/clang-tidy fucking up range-for loops when the loop happened to contain a variable that it thought was a nice variable for the range-for loop-var, e.g.