问题
I don't understand very well the std::move function
template <class T>
typename remove_reference<T>::type&&
move(T&& a)
{
return a;
}
why remove_reference ?
could someone give me a simple explanation ?
回答1:
Think about what happens if T is an lvalue reference, for example MyClass &. In that case, T && would become MyClass & &&, and due to reference collapsing rules, this would be transformed into MyClass & again. To achieve the right result, typename remove_reference<MyClass&>::type&& first removes any reference decorations from the type, so MyClass & is mapped to MyClass, and then the rvalue reference is applied to it, yielding MyClass &&.
回答2:
Because rvalue reference to lvalue reference would decay to lvalue reference, and returing lvalue reference would have different semantics from those you would expect from move.
Edit: Huh, why the downvote? Check out this code:
template < typename T > T&& func(T&& x) { return x; }
int main()
{
int x;
int &y = func(x);
}
Further reading: http://www.justsoftwaresolutions.co.uk/cplusplus/rvalue_references_and_perfect_forwarding.html
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5529382/move-semantics-stdmove