According to this talk there is a certain pitfall when using C++11 range base for
on Qt containers. Consider:
QList<MyStruct> list;
for(const MyStruct &item : list)
{
//...
}
The pitfall, according to the talk, comes from the implicit sharing. Under the hood the ranged-based for gets the iterator from the container. But because the container is not const the interator will be non-const and that is apparently enough for the container to detach.
When you control the lifetime of a container this is easy to fix, one just passes the const reference to the container to force it to use const_iterator and not to detach.
QList<MyStruct> list;
const Qlist<MyStruct> &constList = list;
for(const MyStruct &item : constList)
{
//...
}
However what about for example containers as return values.
QList<MyStruct> foo() { //... }
void main()
{
for(const MyStruct &item : foo())
{
}
}
What does happen here? Is the container still copied? Intuitively I would say it is so to avoid that this might need to be done?
QList<MyStruct> foo() { //... }
main()
{
for(const MyStruct &item : const_cast<const QList<MyStruct>>(foo()))
{
}
}
I am not sure. I know it is a bit more verbose but I need this because I use ranged based for loops heavily on huge containers a lot so the talk kind of struck the right string with me.
So far I use a helper function to convert the container to the const reference but if there is a easier/shorter way to achieve the same I would like to hear it.
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