construct
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Category: allocators |
Component type: function |
Prototype
template <class T1, class T2> void construct(T1* p, const T2& value);
Description
In C++, the operator new allocates memory for an object and then
creates an object at that location by calling a constructor. Occasionally,
however, it is useful to separate those two operations. [1] If p is
a pointer to memory that has been allocated but not initialized,
then construct(p, value) creates an object of type T1 at the location
pointed to by p. The argument value is passed as an argument to
T1's constructor.
Definition
Defined in the standard header memory, and in the nonstandard
backward-compatibility header algo.h. The construct algorithm
is no longer part of the C++ standard; it was present in early drafts,
and it is retained in this implementation for backward compatibility.
Requirements on types
-
T1 must have a constructor that takes a single argument of
type T2.
Preconditions
-
p is a valid pointer that points to a region of memory whose
size is at least sizeof(T1).
-
The memory pointed to by p is uninitialized. That is, no
object has been constructed at the location p.
Complexity
Example
double* dp = (double*) malloc(sizeof(double));
construct(dp, 3);
assert(*dp == 3);
Notes
[1]
In particular, construct, along with other low-level memory
allocation primitives, is used to implement container classes.
See also
Allocators, destroy, uninitialized_copy,
uninitialized_fill, uninitialized_fill_n,
raw_storage_iterator
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