I've read few papers about && and I'm just curious if having:
void fnc_1(int&& p)
{
//...
}
void fnc(int&& r)
{
fnc_1(r);//am I suppose to/should I? call it like so:fnc_1(std::forward(r))
}
or just pas开发者_运维知识库sing 'r' is enough?
fnc_1(r)
won't compile, because r
is an lvalue, just like any other variable, regardless of type. Yes, that's right, named rvalue references are lvalues, not rvalues.
fnc_1(std::forward(r))
also won't compile, because std::forward
is specifically designed not to infer its template argument.
To pass an rvalue, either of the following would work:
fnc_1(std::move(r))
fnc_1(std::forward<int&&>(r))
fnc_1(std::forward<int>(r))
Using std::move
is the idiomatic way to cast an lvalue to an rvalue, so I would recommend using that.
The std::forward
template is usually for dependent types. Please read this question carefully to see whether it applies here. This is a difficult subject to master, so feel free to update your question with relevant details about your exact problem (using rvalue references for integers isn't terribly exciting...).
I believe your question is about the understanding of the basic properties of rvalue references. The rule of thumb to remember is:
- whatever has a name is a lvalue (const or not).
- whatever has no name is a rvalue.
- Types with
&&
bind to rvalues.
If you have a function...
void foo(SomeClass&& x)
{
// ... then here x has type SomeClass& !
}
then inside the body, x
is a name, and therefore a l value. It really has type SomeClass&
. You must use std::move
to turn a SomeClass&
into SomeClass&&
:
void bar(SomeClass&& x)
{
// Since `x` has a name here, it is a Lvalue.
// Therefore it has type SomeClass&, what the signature doesn't indicate.
// We thus have to explicitly turn it into a rvalue:
foo(std::move(x));
}
精彩评论