Is it possible to use a reference as the value in a standard map container in C++?
If not - why not?
Example declaration:
map<int, SomeStruct&> map_num_to_struct;
Example usage:
...
SomeStruct* some_struct = new SomeStruct();
map_num_to_struct[3] = *some_struct;
map_num_to_struct[3].some_fie...
The following:
std::map<int, ClassA &> test;
gives:
error C2101: '&' on constant
While the following
std::map<ClassA &, int> test;
gives
error C2528: '_First' : pointer to reference is illegal
The latter seems like map cannot contain a reference for the key value, since it needs to in...
How to have this code for all waiting threads? They all proceed when I have this in my waiting code. And in worker I have only cv.notify_one. But all waiting threads proceed.
That's just to check if the wake-up was spurious. Because on some platforms it's not efficient to make sure that wake-ups only happen when notify is called
just check if the thing you were waiting for, has actually happened
Today I saw my boss's code which uses a const reference as a map's value type.
Here's the code:
class ConfigManager{
public:
map<PB::Point, const PB::WorldPoint&, compare_point> world_point;
//the rest are omitted
};
(PB is Google Protobuf, we are using the Protobuf library. I do...
Well I am checking an answer. Someone answered my question.
I don't understand why there is still someone downvoting my quesiton. Very funny. The question comes from real life and I've tried to rephrase it as best as I could. the question is clean with paragraphs separated.
it's interesting in that most SO answers talk about the case where the container's value_type is a reference type, but that's not what's happening in case of std::map
it's std::pair<const K, V>, and V happens to be a reference type, but value_type itself, is not one
my honest opinion on your code: please don't do this. While I have attempted, for about 20 minutes, to search the standard draft for words that would say it's wrong, I have failed to find anything relevant.
You encountering the problems mentioned in the question is the main reason why to not do this.
So anyway, while I can't speak, so far, of the legal aspects of what's going on, I can describe behaviour of your implementation.
> Isn't using a const reference can extend a temporary's lifetime?
this is a very specific rule that applies to very specific situation, that is
const T& a = my_temporary;
(if you ask me, we would be better off without this rule - but there is more confusing stuff in C++)
(by "please don't do this", I mean using references as mapped_type - I can't tell if it's legal, but it's definitely "it hurts when I do this")