std::auto_ptr::auto_ptr - cppreference.com (original) (raw)
| explicit auto_ptr( X* p = 0 ) throw(); | (1) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
|---|---|---|
| auto_ptr( auto_ptr& r ) throw(); | (2) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
| template< class Y >auto_ptr( auto_ptr<Y>& r ) throw(); | (3) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
| auto_ptr( auto_ptr_ref<X> m ) throw(); | (4) | (deprecated in C++11) (removed in C++17) |
Constructs the auto_ptr from a pointer that refers to the object to manage.
Constructs the
auto_ptrwith pointer p.Constructs the
auto_ptrwith the pointer held in r. r.release() is called to acquire the ownership of the object.Same as (2). Y* must be implicitly convertible to T*.
Constructs the
auto_ptrwith the pointer held in theauto_ptrinstance referred to by m. p.release() is called for theauto_ptr pthat m holds to acquire the ownership of the object.
auto_ptr_ref is an implementation-defined type that holds a reference to auto_ptr. std::auto_ptr is implicitly convertible to and assignable from this type. The implementation is allowed to provide the template with a different name or implement equivalent functionality in other ways.
[edit] Parameters
| p | - | a pointer to an object to manage |
|---|---|---|
| r | - | another auto_ptr to transfer the ownership of the object from |
| m | - | an implementation-defined type that holds a reference to auto_ptr |
[edit] Notes
The constructor and the copy assignment operator from auto_ptr_ref is provided to allow copy-constructing and assigning std::auto_ptr from nameless temporaries. Since its copy constructor and copy assignment operator take the argument as non-const reference, they cannot bind rvalue arguments directly. However, a user-defined conversion can be executed (which releases the original auto_ptr), followed by a call to the constructor or copy-assignment operator that take auto_ptr_ref by value. This is an early implementation of move semantics.