2. taking T&& in deduced context is actually "universal reference" or "forwarding reference" and means different template argument type deduction rules. In deed this is where the perfect forwarding comes in as you expected. godbolt.org/z/eczoxx6j6
(here the copy and the move are avoided, instead the member is directly constructed from the argument value)
Typically, yes. `T const&` doesn't **need** to lead to copy semantics (because the receiver might actually store a const reference or read-access through it). Neither does `T&&` **need** to lead to move semantics (as I mentioned before: `std::move()` is still required and might be a on conditional code path.
I wanted to talk to you right after work, but checked the time there and realized it's too late.
I think it would be nice to have a different room if that's okay. I need a teacher who can help me learn c++. Learning by myself is just taking too long especially with this language haha.
@sehe Okay, I will try to figure out how to deal with this io_context and threading stuff tonight. Will update you whether I was successful or not.
@Electrical_engineer_student The middle is evaluated like a bool. package is a Package* and pointers are convertible to bool. nullptr is evaluated as false and everything else is evaluated as true similar to integers. Effectively the loop keeps going until eventually package->getNext() returns nullptr which means you ran out of packages.
Say I have a function that excepts a lot of parameters, and is called multiple times in another function where each time only 1 or 2 parameters are changed. I thought about packing all the parameters inside a struct and passing the struct instead, thus reducing duplication of code. Is this a common idea to do?
It's generally very difficult to tell what the average C++ programmer does, but it seems obvious and useful enough to me that I assume most of them do it.
It's especially good if you can give that struct a decent name.