vector exception to {} initializers

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Bjarne Stroustrup 2017-05-23 15:03:52 -04:00
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# <a name="main"></a>C++ Core Guidelines
May 22, 2017
May 23, 2017
Editors:
@ -11968,6 +11968,43 @@ Whe unambiguous, the `T` can be left out of `T{e}`.
The constructuction notation is the most general [initializer notation](#Res-list).
##### Exception
`std::vector` and other containers were defined before we had `{}` as a notation for construction.
Consider:
vector<string> vs {10}; // ten empty strings
vector<int> vi1 {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10}; // ten elements 1..10
vector<int> vi2 {10}; // one element with the value 10
How do we get a `vector` of 10 default initialized `int`s?
vector<int> v3(10); // ten elements with value 0
The use of `()` rather than `{}` for number of elements is conventional (going back to the early 1980s), hard to change, but still
a design error: for a container where the element type can be confused with the number of elements, we have an ambiguity that
must be resolved.
The conventional resolution is to interpret `{10}` as a list of one element and use `(10)` to distinguish a size.
This mistake need not be repeated in new code.
We can define a type to represent the number of elements:
struct Count { int n };
template<typename T>
class Vector {
public:
Vector(Count n); // n default-initialized elements
Vector(initializer_list<T> init); // init.size() elements
// ...
};
Vector<int> v1{10};
Vector<int> v2{Count{10}};
Vector<Count> v3{Count{10}}; // yes, there is still a very minor problem
The main problem left is to find a suitable name for `Count`.
##### Enforcement
Flag the C-style `(T)e` and functional-style `T(e)` casts.