Can I force std::vector to not deallocate its memory after the vector goes out of scope?
For example, if I have
It is possible but you should never do it. Forcing a vector to leave memory leak is a terrible idea and if you need such a thing then you need to re-think your design. std::vector is a resource managing type whose one of the main goals is to ensure that we don't have a leak. Never try to break that.
Now, to answer your specific question: std::vector
takes an allocator type as second template parameter which is default to std::allocator
. Now you can write a custom allocator that doesn't release any memory and use that with your vector. Writing a custom allocator is not very trivial work, so I'm not going to describe that here (but you can Google to find the tutorials).
If you really want to use custom allocator then you must ensure that your vector never triggers a grow operation. Cause during growing capacity the vector will move/copy data to new location and release the old memories using the allocator. If you use an allocator that leaks then during growing you not only retain the final data, but also retain the old memories which I'm sure that you don't want to retain. So make sure that you create the vector with full capacity.