std::auto_ptr
Defined in header
<memory>
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template< class T > class auto_ptr;
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(1) | (deprecated) |
template<> class auto_ptr<void>
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(2) | (deprecated) |
auto_ptr
is a smart pointer that manages an object obtained via new and deletes that object when auto_ptr
itself is destroyed. It may be used to provide exception safety for dynamically-allocated objects, for passing ownership of dynamically-allocated objects into functions and for returning dynamically-allocated objects from functions.
Copying an auto_ptr
copies the pointer and transfers ownership to the destination: both copy construction and copy assignment of auto_ptr
modify their right hand arguments, and the "copy" is not equal to the original. Because of these unusual copy semantics, auto_ptr
may not be placed in standard containers. std::unique_ptr is preferred for this and other uses.
2) Specialization for type void is provided, it declares the typedef element_type
, but no member functions.
An additional class template auto_ptr_ref
is referred to throughout the documentation. It is an implementation-defined type that holds a reference to auto_ptr
. The implementation is allowed to provide the template with a different name or implement the functions returning it or accepting it as parameter in other ways.
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[edit] Member types
Member type | Definition |
element_type | T |
[edit] Member functions
creates a new auto_ptr (public member function) |
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destroys an auto_ptr and the managed object (public member function) |
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transfers ownership from another auto_ptr (public member function) |
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converts the managed pointer to a pointer to different type (public member function) |
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Observers |
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obtains a pointer to the managed object (public member function) |
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accesses the managed object (public member function) |
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Modifiers |
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destroys the managed object (public member function) |
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releases ownership of the managed object (public member function) |