'Initializing container of unique_ptrs from initializer list fails with GCC 4.7
I am trying to initialise an std::vector<std::unique_ptr<std::string>> in a way that is equivalent to an example from Bjarne Stroustrup's C++11 FAQ:
using namespace std;
vector<unique_ptr<string>> vs { new string{"Doug"}, new string{"Adams"} }; // fails
unique_ptr<string> ps { new string{"42"} }; // OK
I can see no reason why this syntax should fail. Is there something wrong with this way of initializing the container?
The compiler error message is huge; the relevant segment I find is below:
/usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/lib/gcc/i686-linux-gnu/4.7.0/../../../../include/c++/4.7.0 /bits/stl_construct.h:77:7: error: no matching function for call to
'std::unique_ptr<std::basic_string<char> >::unique_ptr(std::basic_string<char>&)'
What is the way to fix this error ?
Solution 1:[1]
unique_ptr's constructor is explicit. So you can't create one implicitly with from new string{"foo"}. It needs to be something like unique_ptr<string>{ new string{"foo"} }.
Which leads us to this
// not good
vector<unique_ptr<string>> vs {
unique_ptr<string>{ new string{"Doug"} },
unique_ptr<string>{ new string{"Adams"} }
};
However it may leak if one of the constructors fails. It's safer to use make_unique:
// does not work
vector<unique_ptr<string>> vs {
make_unique<string>("Doug"),
make_unique<string>("Adams")
};
But... initializer_lists always perform copies, and unique_ptrs are not copyable. This is something really annoying about initializer lists. You can hack around it, or fallback to initialization with calls to emplace_back.
If you're actually managing strings with smart pointers and it's not just for the example, then you can do even better: just make a vector<string>. The std::string already handles the resources it uses.
Solution 2:[2]
After "fixing" your example:
#include <vector>
#include <memory>
#include <string>
int main()
{
std::vector<std::unique_ptr<std::string>> vs = { { new std::string{"Doug"} }, { new std::string{"Adams"} } }; // fails
std::unique_ptr<std::string> ps { new std::string{"42"} }; // OK
}
I got very a clear error message:
error: converting to 'std::unique_ptr<std::basic_string<char> >' from initializer list would use explicit constructor 'std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>::unique_ptr(std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>::pointer) [with _Tp = std::basic_string<char>, _Dp = std::default_delete<std::basic_string<char> >, std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>::pointer = std::basic_string<char>*]'
This error tells us that it is not possible to use the unique_ptr's explicit contructor!
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | Jay Bazuzi |
| Solution 2 | Adrian Mole |
