In C++03, an expression is either an rvalue or an lvalue.
In C++11, an expression can be an:
- rvalue
- lvalue
- xvalue
- glvalue
- prvalue
Two categories have become five categories.
- What are these new categories of expressions?
- How do these new categories relate to the existing rvalue and lvalue categories?
- Are the rvalue and lvalue categories in C++0开发者_如何学编程x the same as they are in C++03?
- Why are these new categories needed? Are the WG21 gods just trying to confuse us mere mortals?
I guess this document might serve as a not so short introduction : n3055
The whole massacre began with the move semantics. Once we have expressions that can be moved and not copied, suddenly easy to grasp rules demanded distinction between expressions that can be moved, and in which direction.
From what I guess based on the draft, the r/l value distinction stays the same, only in the context of moving things get messy.
Are they needed? Probably not if we wish to forfeit the new features. But to allow better optimization we should probably embrace them.
Quoting n3055:
- An lvalue (so-called, historically,
because lvalues could appear on the
left-hand side of an assignment
expression) designates a function or
an object. [Example: If
E
is an expression of pointer type, then*E
is an lvalue expression referring to the object or function to whichE
points. As another example, the result of calling a function whose return type is an lvalue reference is an lvalue.] - An xvalue (an “eXpiring” value) also refers to an object, usually near the end of its lifetime (so that its resources may be moved, for example). An xvalue is the result of certain kinds of expressions involving rvalue references. [Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is an rvalue reference is an xvalue.]
- A glvalue (“generalized” lvalue) is an lvalue or an xvalue.
- An rvalue (so-called, historically, because rvalues could appear on the right-hand side of an assignment expression) is an xvalue, a temporary object or subobject thereof, or a value that is not associated with an object.
- A prvalue (“pure” rvalue) is an rvalue that is not an xvalue. [Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is not a reference is a prvalue]
The document in question is a great reference for this question, because it shows the exact changes in the standard that have happened as a result of the introduction of the new nomenclature.
What are these new categories of expressions?
The FCD (n3092) has an excellent description:
— An lvalue (so called, historically, because lvalues could appear on the left-hand side of an assignment expression) designates a function or an object. [ Example: If E is an expression of pointer type, then *E is an lvalue expression referring to the object or function to which E points. As another example, the result of calling a function whose return type is an lvalue reference is an lvalue. —end example ]
— An xvalue (an “eXpiring” value) also refers to an object, usually near the end of its lifetime (so that its resources may be moved, for example). An xvalue is the result of certain kinds of expressions involving rvalue references (8.3.2). [ Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is an rvalue reference is an xvalue. —end example ]
— A glvalue (“generalized” lvalue) is an lvalue or an xvalue.
— An rvalue (so called, historically, because rvalues could appear on the right-hand side of an assignment expressions) is an xvalue, a temporary object (12.2) or subobject thereof, or a value that is not associated with an object.
— A prvalue (“pure” rvalue) is an rvalue that is not an xvalue. [ Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is not a reference is a prvalue. The value of a literal such as 12, 7.3e5, or true is also a prvalue. —end example ]
Every expression belongs to exactly one of the fundamental classifications in this taxonomy: lvalue, xvalue, or prvalue. This property of an expression is called its value category. [ Note: The discussion of each built-in operator in Clause 5 indicates the category of the value it yields and the value categories of the operands it expects. For example, the built-in assignment operators expect that the left operand is an lvalue and that the right operand is a prvalue and yield an lvalue as the result. User-defined operators are functions, and the categories of values they expect and yield are determined by their parameter and return types. —end note
I suggest you read the entire section 3.10 Lvalues and rvalues though.
How do these new categories relate to the existing rvalue and lvalue categories?
Again:
Are the rvalue and lvalue categories in C++0x the same as they are in C++03?
The semantics of rvalues has evolved particularly with the introduction of move semantics.
Why are these new categories needed?
So that move construction/assignment could be defined and supported.
I'll start with your last question:
Why are these new categories needed?
The C++ standard contains many rules that deal with the value category of an expression. Some rules make a distinction between lvalue and rvalue. For example, when it comes to overload resolution. Other rules make a distinction between glvalue and prvalue. For example, you can have a glvalue with an incomplete or abstract type but there is no prvalue with an incomplete or abstract type. Before we had this terminology the rules that actually need to distinguish between glvalue/prvalue referred to lvalue/rvalue and they were either unintentionally wrong or contained lots of explaining and exceptions to the rule a la "...unless the rvalue is due to unnamed rvalue reference...". So, it seems like a good idea to just give the concepts of glvalues and prvalues their own name.
What are these new categories of expressions? How do these new categories relate to the existing rvalue and lvalue categories?
We still have the terms lvalue and rvalue that are compatible with C++98. We just divided the rvalues into two subgroups, xvalues and prvalues, and we refer to lvalues and xvalues as glvalues. Xvalues are a new kind of value category for unnamed rvalue references. Every expression is one of these three: lvalue, xvalue, prvalue. A Venn diagram would look like this:
______ ______
/ X \
/ / \ \
| l | x | pr |
\ \ / /
\______X______/
gl r
Examples with functions:
int prvalue();
int& lvalue();
int&& xvalue();
But also don't forget that named rvalue references are lvalues:
void foo(int&& t) {
// t is initialized with an rvalue expression
// but is actually an lvalue expression itself
}
Why are these new categories needed? Are the WG21 gods just trying to confuse us mere mortals?
I don't feel that the other answers (good though many of them are) really capture the answer to this particular question. Yes, these categories and such exist to allow move semantics, but the complexity exists for one reason. This is the one inviolate rule of moving stuff in C++11:
Thou shalt move only when it is unquestionably safe to do so.
That is why these categories exist: to be able to talk about values where it is safe to move from them, and to talk about values where it is not.
In the earliest version of r-value references, movement happened easily. Too easily. Easily enough that there was a lot of potential for implicitly moving things when the user didn't really mean to.
Here are the circumstances under which it is safe to move something:
- When it's a temporary or subobject thereof. (prvalue)
- When the user has explicitly said to move it.
If you do this:
SomeType &&Func() { ... }
SomeType &&val = Func();
SomeType otherVal{val};
What does this do? In older versions of the spec, before the 5 values came in, this would provoke a move. Of course it does. You passed an rvalue reference to the constructor, and thus it binds to the constructor that takes an rvalue reference. That's obvious.
There's just one problem with this; you didn't ask to move it. Oh, you might say that the &&
should have been a clue, but that doesn't change the fact that it broke the rule. val
isn't a temporary because temporaries don't have names. You may have extended the lifetime of the temporary, but that means it isn't temporary; it's just like any other stack variable.
If it's not a temporary, and you didn't ask to move it, then moving is wrong.
The obvious solution is to make val
an lvalue. This means that you can't move from it. OK, fine; it's named, so its an lvalue.
Once you do that, you can no longer say that SomeType&&
means the same thing everwhere. You've now made a distinction between named rvalue references and unnamed rvalue references. Well, named rvalue references are lvalues; that was our solution above. So what do we call unnamed rvalue references (the return value from Func
above)?
It's not an lvalue, because you can't move from an lvalue. And we need to be able to move by returning a &&
; how else could you explicitly say to move something? That is what std::move
returns, after all. It's not an rvalue (old-style), because it can be on the left side of an equation (things are actually a bit more complicated, see this question and the comments below). It is neither an lvalue nor an rvalue; it's a new kind of thing.
What we have is a value that you can treat as an lvalue, except that it is implicitly moveable from. We call it an xvalue.
Note that xvalues are what makes us gain the other two categories of values:
A prvalue is really just the new name for the previous type of rvalue, i.e. they're the rvalues that aren't xvalues.
Glvalues are the union of xvalues and lvalues in one group, because they do share a lot of properties in common.
So really, it all comes down to xvalues and the need to restrict movement to exactly and only certain places. Those places are defined by the rvalue category; prvalues are the implicit moves, and xvalues are the explicit moves (std::move
returns an xvalue).
IMHO, the best explanation about its meaning gave us Stroustrup + take into account examples of Dániel Sándor and Mohan:
Stroustrup:
Now I was seriously worried. Clearly we were headed for an impasse or a mess or both. I spent the lunchtime doing an analysis to see which of the properties (of values) were independent. There were only two independent properties:
has identity
– i.e. and address, a pointer, the user can determine whether two copies are identical, etc.can be moved from
– i.e. we are allowed to leave to source of a "copy" in some indeterminate, but valid stateThis led me to the conclusion that there are exactly three kinds of values (using the regex notational trick of using a capital letter to indicate a negative – I was in a hurry):
iM
: has identity and cannot be moved fromim
: has identity and can be moved from (e.g. the result of casting an lvalue to a rvalue reference)
Im
: does not have identity and can be moved from.The fourth possibility,
IM
, (doesn’t have identity and cannot be moved) is not useful inC++
(or, I think) in any other language.In addition to these three fundamental classifications of values, we have two obvious generalizations that correspond to the two independent properties:
i
: has identitym
: can be moved fromThis led me to put this diagram on the board:
Naming
I observed that we had only limited freedom to name: The two points to the left (labeled
iM
andi
) are what people with more or less formality have calledlvalues
and the two points on the right (labeledm
andIm
) are what people with more or less formality have calledrvalues
. This must be reflected in our naming. That is, the left "leg" of theW
should have names related tolvalue
and the right "leg" of theW
should have names related torvalue.
I note that this whole discussion/problem arise from the introduction of rvalue references and move semantics. These notions simply don’t exist in Strachey’s world consisting of justrvalues
andlvalues
. Someone observed that the ideas that
- Every
value
is either anlvalue
or anrvalue
- An
lvalue
is not anrvalue
and anrvalue
is not anlvalue
are deeply embedded in our consciousness, very useful properties, and traces of this dichotomy can be found all over the draft standard. We all agreed that we ought to preserve those properties (and make them precise). This further constrained our naming choices. I observed that the standard library wording uses
rvalue
to meanm
(the generalization), so that to preserve the expectation and text of the standard library the right-hand bottom point of theW
should be namedrvalue.
This led to a focused discussion of naming. First, we needed to decide on
lvalue.
Shouldlvalue
meaniM
or the generalizationi
? Led by Doug Gregor, we listed the places in the core language wording where the wordlvalue
was qualified to mean the one or the other. A list was made and in most cases and in the most tricky/brittle textlvalue
currently meansiM
. This is the classical meaning of lvalue because "in the old days" nothing was moved;move
is a novel notion inC++0x
. Also, naming the topleft point of theW
lvalue
gives us the property that every value is anlvalue
or anrvalue
, but not both.So, the top left point of the
W
islvalue
and the bottom right point isrvalue.
What does that make the bottom left and top right points? The bottom left point is a generalization of the classical lvalue, allowing for move. So it is ageneralized lvalue.
We named itglvalue.
You can quibble about the abbreviation, but (I think) not with the logic. We assumed that in serious usegeneralized lvalue
would somehow be abbreviated anyway, so we had better do it immediately (or risk confusion). The top right point of the W is less general than the bottom right (now, as ever, calledrvalue
). That point represent the original pure notion of an object you can move from because it cannot be referred to again (except by a destructor). I liked the phrasespecialized rvalue
in contrast togeneralized lvalue
butpure rvalue
abbreviated toprvalue
won out (and probably rightly so). So, the left leg of the W islvalue
andglvalue
and the right leg isprvalue
andrvalue.
Incidentally, every value is either a glvalue or a prvalue, but not both.This leaves the top middle of the
W
:im
; that is, values that have identity and can be moved. We really don’t have anything that guides us to a good name for those esoteric beasts. They are important to people working with the (draft) standard text, but are unlikely to become a household name. We didn’t find any real constraints on the naming to guide us, so we picked ‘x’ for the center, the unknown, the strange, the xpert only, or even x-rated.
INTRODUCTION
ISOC++11 (officially ISO/IEC 14882:2011) is the most recent version of the standard of the C++ programming language. It contains some new features, and concepts, for example:
- rvalue references
- xvalue, glvalue, prvalue expression value categories
- move semantics
If we would like to understand the concepts of the new expression value categories we have to be aware of that there are rvalue and lvalue references. It is better to know rvalues can be passed to non-const rvalue references.
int& r_i=7; // compile error
int&& rr_i=7; // OK
We can gain some intuition of the concepts of value categories if we quote the subsection titled Lvalues and rvalues from the working draft N3337 (the most similar draft to the published ISOC++11 standard).
3.10 Lvalues and rvalues [basic.lval]
1 Expressions are categorized according to the taxonomy in Figure 1.
- An lvalue (so called, historically, because lvalues could appear on the left-hand side of an assignment expression) designates a function or an object. [ Example: If E is an expression of pointer type, then *E is an lvalue expression referring to the object or function to which E points. As another example, the result of calling a function whose return type is an lvalue reference is an lvalue. —end example ]
- An xvalue (an “eXpiring” value) also refers to an object, usually near the end of its lifetime (so that its resources may be moved, for example). An xvalue is the result of certain kinds of expressions involving rvalue references (8.3.2). [ Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is an rvalue reference is an xvalue. —end example ]
- A glvalue (“generalized” lvalue) is an lvalue or an xvalue.
- An rvalue (so called, historically, because rvalues could appear on the right-hand side of an assignment expression) is an xvalue, a
temporary object (12.2) or subobject thereof, or a value that is not
associated with an object.- A prvalue (“pure” rvalue) is an rvalue that is not an xvalue. [ Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is not a
reference is a prvalue. The value of a literal such as 12, 7.3e5, or
true is also a prvalue. —end example ]Every expression belongs to exactly one of the fundamental classifications in this taxonomy: lvalue, xvalue, or prvalue. This property of an expression is called its value category.
But I am not quite sure about that this subsection is enough to understand the concepts clearly, because "usually" is not really general, "near the end of its lifetime" is not really concrete, "involving rvalue references" is not really clear, and "Example: The result of calling a function whose return type is an rvalue reference is an xvalue." sounds like a snake is biting its tail.
PRIMARY VALUE CATEGORIES
Every expression belongs to exactly one primary value category. These value categories are lvalue, xvalue and prvalue categories.
lvalues
The expression E belongs to the lvalue category if and only if E refers to an entity that ALREADY has had an identity (address, name or alias) that makes it accessible outside of E.
#include <iostream>
int i=7;
const int& f(){
return i;
}
int main()
{
std::cout<<&"www"<<std::endl; // The expression "www" in this row is an lvalue expression, because string literals are arrays and every array has an address.
i; // The expression i in this row is an lvalue expression, because it refers to the same entity ...
i; // ... as the entity the expression i in this row refers to.
int* p_i=new int(7);
*p_i; // The expression *p_i in this row is an lvalue expression, because it refers to the same entity ...
*p_i; // ... as the entity the expression *p_i in this row refers to.
const int& r_I=7;
r_I; // The expression r_I in this row is an lvalue expression, because it refers to the same entity ...
r_I; // ... as the entity the expression r_I in this row refers to.
f(); // The expression f() in this row is an lvalue expression, because it refers to the same entity ...
i; // ... as the entity the expression f() in this row refers to.
return 0;
}
xvalues
The expression E belongs to the xvalue category if and only if it is
— the result of calling a function, whether implicitly or explicitly, whose return type is an rvalue reference to the type of object being returned, or
int&& f(){
return 3;
}
int main()
{
f(); // The expression f() belongs to the xvalue category, because f() return type is an rvalue reference to object type.
return 0;
}
— a cast to an rvalue reference to object type, or
int main()
{
static_cast<int&&>(7); // The expression static_cast<int&&>(7) belongs to the xvalue category, because it is a cast to an rvalue reference to object type.
std::move(7); // std::move(7) is equivalent to static_cast<int&&>(7).
return 0;
}
— a class member access expression designating a non-static data member of non-reference type in which the object expression is an xvalue, or
struct As
{
int i;
};
As&& f(){
return As();
}
int main()
{
f().i; // The expression f().i belongs to the xvalue category, because As::i is a non-static data member of non-reference type, and the subexpression f() belongs to the xvlaue category.
return 0;
}
— a pointer-to-member expression in which the first operand is an xvalue and the second operand is a pointer to data member.
Note that the effect of the rules above is that named rvalue references to objects are treated as lvalues and unnamed rvalue references to objects are treated as xvalues; rvalue references to functions are treated as lvalues whether named or not.
#include <functional>
struct As
{
int i;
};
As&& f(){
return As();
}
int main()
{
f(); // The expression f() belongs to the xvalue category, because it refers to an unnamed rvalue reference to object.
As&& rr_a=As();
rr_a; // The expression rr_a belongs to the lvalue category, because it refers to a named rvalue reference to object.
std::ref(f); // The expression std::ref(f) belongs to the lvalue category, because it refers to an rvalue reference to function.
return 0;
}
prvalues
The expression E belongs to the prvalue category if and only if E belongs neither to the lvalue nor to the xvalue category.
struct As
{
void f(){
this; // The expression this is a prvalue expression. Note, that the expression this is not a variable.
}
};
As f(){
return As();
}
int main()
{
f(); // The expression f() belongs to the prvalue category, because it belongs neither to the lvalue nor to the xvalue category.
return 0;
}
MIXED VALUE CATEGORIES
There are two further important mixed value categories. These value categories are rvalue and glvalue categories.
rvalues
The expression E belongs to the rvalue category if and only if E belongs to the xvalue category, or to the prvalue category.
Note that this definition means that the expression E belongs to the rvalue category if and only if E refers to an entity that has not had any identity that makes it accessible outside of E YET.
glvalues
The expression E belongs to the glvalue category if and only if E belongs to the lvalue category, or to the xvalue category.
A PRACTICAL RULE
Scott Meyer has published a very useful rule of thumb to distinguish rvalues from lvalues.
- If you can take the address of an expression, the expression is an lvalue.
- If the type of an expression is an lvalue reference (e.g., T& or const T&, etc.), that expression is an lvalue.
- Otherwise, the expression is an rvalue. Conceptually (and typically also in fact), rvalues correspond to temporary objects, such as those returned from functions or created through implicit type conversions. Most literal values (e.g., 10 and 5.3) are also rvalues.
I have struggled with this for a long time, until I came across the cppreference.com explanation of the value categories.
It is actually rather simple, but I find that it is often explained in a way that's hard to memorize. Here it is explained very schematically. I'll quote some parts of the page:
Primary categories
The primary value categories correspond to two properties of expressions:
has identity: it's possible to determine whether the expression refers to the same entity as another expression, such as by comparing addresses of the objects or the functions they identify (obtained directly or indirectly);
can be moved from: move constructor, move assignment operator, or another function overload that implements move semantics can bind to the expression.
Expressions that:
- have identity and cannot be moved from are called lvalue expressions;
- have identity and can be moved from are called xvalue expressions;
- do not have identity and can be moved from are called prvalue expressions;
- do not have identity and cannot be moved from are not used.
lvalue
An lvalue ("left value") expression is an expression that has identity and cannot be moved from.
rvalue (until C++11), prvalue (since C++11)
A prvalue ("pure rvalue") expression is an expression that does not have identity and can be moved from.
xvalue
An xvalue ("expiring value") expression is an expression that has identity and can be moved from.
glvalue
A glvalue ("generalized lvalue") expression is an expression that is either an lvalue or an xvalue. It has identity. It may or may not be moved from.
rvalue (since C++11)
An rvalue ("right value") expression is an expression that is either a prvalue or an xvalue. It can be moved from. It may or may not have identity.
So let's put that into a table:
Can be moved from (= rvalue) | Cannot be moved from | |
---|---|---|
Has identity (= glvalue) | xvalue | lvalue |
No identity | prvalue | not used |
C++03's categories are too restricted to capture the introduction of rvalue references correctly into expression attributes.
With the introduction of them, it was said that an unnamed rvalue reference evaluates to an rvalue, such that overload resolution would prefer rvalue reference bindings, which would make it select move constructors over copy constructors. But it was found that this causes problems all around, for example with Dynamic Types and with qualifications.
To show this, consider
int const&& f();
int main() {
int &&i = f(); // disgusting!
}
On pre-xvalue drafts, this was allowed, because in C++03, rvalues of non-class types are never cv-qualified. But it is intended that const
applies in the rvalue-reference case, because here we do refer to objects (= memory!), and dropping const from non-class rvalues is mainly for the reason that there is no object around.
The issue for dynamic types is of similar nature. In C++03, rvalues of class type have a known dynamic type - it's the static type of that expression. Because to have it another way, you need references or dereferences, which evaluate to an lvalue. That isn't true with unnamed rvalue references, yet they can show polymorphic behavior. So to solve it,
unnamed rvalue references become xvalues. They can be qualified and potentially have their dynamic type different. They do, like intended, prefer rvalue references during overloading, and won't bind to non-const lvalue references.
What previously was an rvalue (literals, objects created by casts to non-reference types) now becomes an prvalue. They have the same preference as xvalues during overloading.
What previously was an lvalue stays an lvalue.
And two groupings are done to capture those that can be qualified and can have different dynamic types (glvalues) and those where overloading prefers rvalue reference binding (rvalues).
As the previous answers exhaustively covered the theory behind the value categories, there is just another thing I'd like to add: you can actually play with it and test it.
For some hands-on experimentation with the value categories, you can make use of the decltype specifier. Its behavior explicitly distinguishes between the three primary value categories (xvalue, lvalue, and prvalue).
Using the preprocessor saves us some typing ...
Primary categories:
#define IS_XVALUE(X) std::is_rvalue_reference<decltype((X))>::value
#define IS_LVALUE(X) std::is_lvalue_reference<decltype((X))>::value
#define IS_PRVALUE(X) !std::is_reference<decltype((X))>::value
Mixed categories:
#define IS_GLVALUE(X) (IS_LVALUE(X) || IS_XVALUE(X))
#define IS_RVALUE(X) (IS_PRVALUE(X) || IS_XVALUE(X))
Now we can reproduce (almost) all the examples from cppreference on value category.
Here are some examples with C++17 (for terse static_assert):
void doesNothing(){}
struct S
{
int x{0};
};
int x = 1;
int y = 2;
S s;
static_assert(IS_LVALUE(x));
static_assert(IS_LVALUE(x+=y));
static_assert(IS_LVALUE("Hello world!"));
static_assert(IS_LVALUE(++x));
static_assert(IS_PRVALUE(1));
static_assert(IS_PRVALUE(x++));
static_assert(IS_PRVALUE(static_cast<double>(x)));
static_assert(IS_PRVALUE(std::string{}));
static_assert(IS_PRVALUE(throw std::exception()));
static_assert(IS_PRVALUE(doesNothing()));
static_assert(IS_XVALUE(std::move(s)));
// The next one doesn't work in gcc 8.2 but in gcc 9.1. Clang 7.0.0 and msvc 19.16 are doing fine.
static_assert(IS_XVALUE(S().x));
The mixed categories are kind of boring once you figured out the primary category.
For some more examples (and experimentation), check out the following link on compiler explorer. Don't bother reading the assembly, though. I added a lot of compilers just to make sure it works across all the common compilers.
These are terms that the C++ committee used to define move semantics in C++11. Here's the story.
I find it difficult to understand the terms given their precise definitions, the long lists of rules or this popular diagram:
It's easier on a Venn diagram with typical examples:
Basically:
- every expression is either lvalue or rvalue
- lvalue must be copied, because it has identity, so can be used later
- rvalue can be moved, either because it's a temporary (prvalue) or explicitly moved (xvalue)
Now, the good question is that if we have two orthogonal properties ("has identity" and "can be moved"), what's the fourth category to complete lvalue, xvalue and prvalue? That would be an expression that has no identity (hence cannot be accessed later) and cannot be moved (one need to copy its value). This is simply not useful, so hasn't been named.
How do these new categories relate to the existing rvalue and lvalue categories?
A C++03 lvalue is still a C++11 lvalue, whereas a C++03 rvalue is called a prvalue in C++11.
One addendum to the excellent answers above, on a point that confused me even after I had read Stroustrup and thought I understood the rvalue/lvalue distinction. When you see
int&& a = 3
,
it's very tempting to read the int&&
as a type and conclude that a
is an rvalue. It's not:
int&& a = 3;
int&& c = a; //error: cannot bind 'int' lvalue to 'int&&'
int& b = a; //compiles
a
has a name and is ipso facto an lvalue. Don't think of the &&
as part of the type of a
; it's just something telling you what a
is allowed to bind to.
This matters particularly for T&&
type arguments in constructors. If you write
Foo::Foo(T&& _t) : t{_t} {}
you will copy _t
into t
. You need
Foo::Foo(T&& _t) : t{std::move(_t)} {}
if you want to move. Would that my compiler warned me when I left out the move
!
This is Venn diagram I made for a highly visual C++ book I'm writing which I will be publishing on leanpub during development soon.
The other answers go into more detail with words, and show similar diagrams. But hopefully this presentation of the information is fairly complete and useful for referencing, in addition.
The main takeaway for me on this topic is that expressions have these two properties: identity and movability. The first deals with the the "solidness" with which something exists. That's important because the C++ abstract machine is allowed to and encouraged to aggressively change and shrink your code through optimizations, and that means that things without identity might only ever exist in the mind of the compiler or in a register for a brief moment before getting trampled on. But a piece of data like that is also guaranteed not to cause issues if you recycle it's innards since there's no way to try to use it. And thus, move semantics were invented to allow us to capture references to temporaries, upgrading them to lvalues and extending their lifetime.
Move semantics originally were about not just throwing away temporaries wastefully, but instead giving them away so they can consumed by another.
When you give your cornbread away, the person you give it to now owns it. They consume it. You should not attempt to eat or digest said cornbread once you've given it away. Maybe that cornbread was headed for the trash anyway, but now it's headed for their bellies. It's not yours anymore.
In C++ land, the idea of "consuming" a resource means that resource is now owned by us and so we should do any cleanup necessary, and ensure the object isn't accessed elsewhere. Often times, that means borrowing the guts to create new objects. I call that "donating organs". Usually, we are talking about pointers or references contained by the object, or something like that, and we want to keep those pointers or references around because they refer to data elsewhere in our program that is not dying.
Thus you could write a function overload that takes an rvalue reference, and if a temporary (prvalue) were passed in, that's the overload that would be called. A new lvalue would be created upon binding to the rvalue reference taken by the function, extending the life of the temporary so you could consume it within your function.
At some point, we realized that we often had lvalue non-temporary data that we were finished with in one scope, but wanted to cannibalize in another scope. But they aren't rvalues and so wouldn't bind to an rvalue reference. So we made std::move
, which is just a fancy cast from lvalue to rvalue reference. Such a datum is an xvalue: a former lvalue now acting as if it were a temporary so it can also be moved from.
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