std::uninitialized_fill
From cppreference.com
| Defined in header <memory>
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template< class NoThrowForwardIt, class T >
void uninitialized_fill( NoThrowForwardIt first,
NoThrowForwardIt last, const T& value );
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(1) | (constexpr since C++26) |
template< class ExecutionPolicy, class NoThrowForwardIt, class T >
void uninitialized_fill( ExecutionPolicy&& policy,
NoThrowForwardIt first,
NoThrowForwardIt last, const T& value );
|
(2) | (since C++17) |
1) Constructs elements in the destination range
[first, last) with the given value value as if by
for (; first != last; ++first)
::new (voidify(*first))
typename std::iterator_traits<NoThrowForwardIt>::value_type(value);
If an exception is thrown during the initialization, the objects already constructed are destroyed in an unspecified order.
2) Same as (1), but executed according to
policy. This overload participates in overload resolution only if the value of the following expression is
true:
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(until C++20) |
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(since C++20) |
Parameters
| first, last | - | the pair of iterators defining the range of elements to initialize |
| value | - | the value to construct the elements with |
| policy | - | the execution policy to use |
| Type requirements | ||
-NoThrowForwardIt must meet the requirements of LegacyForwardIterator.
| ||
-No increment, assignment, comparison, or indirection through valid instances of NoThrowForwardIt may throw exceptions. Applying &* to a NoThrowForwardIt value must yield a pointer to its value type.(until C++11)
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Exceptions
2) During the execution process:
- If the temporary memory resources required for parallelization are not available, std::bad_alloc is thrown.
- If an uncaught exception is thrown while accessing objects via an algorithm argument, the behavior is determined by the execution policy (for standard policies, std::terminate is invoked).
Notes
| Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
__cpp_lib_raw_memory_algorithms |
202411L |
(C++26) | constexpr for specialized <memory> algorithms, (1)
|
Possible implementation
template<class NoThrowForwardIt, class T>
constexpr void uninitialized_fill(NoThrowForwardIt first, NoThrowForwardIt last,
const T& value)
{
using V = typename std::iterator_traits<NoThrowForwardIt>::value_type;
NoThrowForwardIt current = first;
try
{
for (; current != last; ++current)
::new (static_cast<void*>(std::addressof(*current))) V(value);
}
catch (...)
{
for (; first != current; ++first)
first->~V();
throw;
}
}
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Example
Run this code
#include <algorithm>
#include <iostream>
#include <memory>
#include <string>
int main()
{
const std::size_t sz = 4;
std::allocator<std::string> alloc;
std::string* p = alloc.allocate(sz);
std::uninitialized_fill(p, p + sz, "Example");
for (std::string* i = p; i != p + sz; ++i)
{
std::cout << *i << '\n';
i->~basic_string<char>();
}
alloc.deallocate(p, sz);
}
Output:
Example
Example
Example
Example
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 866 | C++98 | given T as the value type of NoThrowForwardIt, ifT::operator new exists, the program might be ill-formed
|
uses global placement new instead
|
| LWG 2433 | C++11 | this algorithm might be hijacked by overloaded operator&
|
uses std::addressof |
See also
| copies an object to an uninitialized area of memory, defined by a start and a count (function template & algorithm function object) | |
(C++20) |
|
(C++20) |
copies an object to an uninitialized area of memory, defined by a range (algorithm function object) |