list initialization (since C++11)
Initializes an object from braced-init-list
Contents |
Syntax
direct-list-initialization
T object { arg1, arg2, ... };
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(1) | ||||||||
T { arg1, arg2, ... }
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new T { arg1, arg2, ... }
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Class { T member { arg1, arg2, ... }; };
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Class:: Class() : member{ arg1, arg2, ...} {...
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copy-list-initialization
T object = { arg1, arg2, ...};
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function( { arg1, arg2, ... } )
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return { arg1, arg2, ... } ;
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object[ { arg1, arg2, ... } ]
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object = { arg1, arg2, ... }
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(10) | ||||||||
U( { arg1, arg2, ... } )
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(11) | ||||||||
Class { T member = { arg1, arg2, ... }; };
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List initialization is performed in the following situations:
- direct-list-initialization (both explicit and non-explicit constructors are considered)
- copy-list-initialization (both explicit and non-explicit constructors are considered, but only non-explicit constructors may be called)
operator[]
, where list-initialization initializes the parameter of the overloaded operatorExplanation
The effects of list initialization of an object of type T
are:
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(since C++14) |
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(until C++14) |
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(since C++14) |
- Otherwise, if
T
is a specialization of std::initializer_list, theT
object is direct-initialized or copy-initialized, depending on context, from a prvalue of the same type initialized from(until C++17) the braced-init-list.
- Otherwise, the constructors of
T
are considered, in two phases:
- All constructors that take std::initializer_list as the only argument, or as the first argument if the remaining arguments have default values, are examined, and matched by overload resolution against a single argument of type std::initializer_list
- If the previous stage does not produce a match, all constructors of
T
participate in overload resolution against the set of arguments that consists of the elements of the braced-init-list, with the restriction that only non-narrowing conversions are allowed. If this stage produces an explicit constructor as the best match for a copy-list-initialization, compilation fails (note, in simple copy-initialization, explicit constructors are not considered at all).
- If the previous stage does not produce a match, all constructors of
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(since C++17) |
- Otherwise (if
T
is not a class type), if the braced-init-list has only one element and eitherT
isn't a reference type or is a reference type whose referenced type is same as or is a base class of the type of the element,T
is direct-initialized (in direct-list-initialization) or copy-initialized (in copy-list-initialization), except that narrowing conversions are not allowed.
- Otherwise, if
T
is a reference type that isn't compatible with the type of the element, a temporary of the referenced type is list-initialized, and the reference is bound to that temporary. (this fails if the reference is a non-const lvalue reference)
- Otherwise, if the braced-init-list has no elements,
T
is value-initialized.
Narrowing conversions
list-initialization limits the allowed implicit conversions by prohibiting the following:
- conversion from a floating-point type to an integer type
- conversion from a long double to double or to float and conversion from double to float, except where the source is a constant expression and overflow does not occur
- conversion from an integer type to a floating-point type, except where the source is a constant expression whose value can be stored exactly in the target type
- conversion from integer or unscoped enumeration type to integer type that cannot represent all values of the original, except where source is a constant expression whose value can be stored exactly in the target type
Notes
Every initializer clause is sequenced before any initializer clause that follows it in the braced-init-list. This is in contrast with the arguments of a function call expression, which are unsequenced.
A braced-init-list is not an expression and therefore has no type, e.g. decltype({1,2}) is ill-formed. Having no type implies that template type deduction cannot deduce a type that matches a braced-init-list, so given the declaration template<class T> void f(T); the expression f({1,2,3}) is ill-formed. However, the template parameter can otherwise be deduced, as is the case for std::vector<int> v(std::istream_iterator<int>(std::cin), {}), where the iterator type is deduced by the first argument but also used in the second parameter position.
A special exception is made for type deduction using the keyword auto , which deduces any braced-init-list as std::initializer_list. |
(until C++17) |
A special exception is made for type deduction using the keyword auto , which deduces any direct-list-initialization with a braced-init-list of one element as initialization of an element of that type. |
(since C++17) |
Also because braced-init-list has no type, special rules for overload resolution apply when it is used as an argument to an overloaded function call.
Aggregates copy/move initialize directly from single-element braced-init-lists of the same type, but non-aggregates consider initializer_list constructors first: struct X { X() = default; X(const X&) = default; }; struct Q { Q() = default; Q(Q const&) = default; Q(std::initializer_list<Q>) {} }; int main() { X x; X x2 = X { x }; // copy-constructor (not aggregate initialization) Q q; Q q2 = Q { q }; // initializer-list constructor (not copy constructor) } |
(since C++14) |
Example
#include <iostream> #include <vector> #include <map> #include <string> struct Foo { std::vector<int> mem = {1,2,3}; // list-initialization of a non-static member std::vector<int> mem2; Foo() : mem2{-1, -2, -3} {} // list-initialization of a member in constructor }; std::pair<std::string, std::string> f(std::pair<std::string, std::string> p) { return {p.second, p.first}; // list-initialization in return statement } int main() { int n0{}; // value-initialization (to zero) int n1{1}; // direct-list-initialization std::string s1{'a', 'b', 'c', 'd'}; // initializer-list constructor call std::string s2{s1, 2, 2}; // regular constructor call std::string s3{0x61, 'a'}; // initializer-list ctor is preferred to (int, char) int n2 = {1}; // copy-list-initialization double d = double{1.2}; // list-initialization of a temporary, then copy-init std::map<int, std::string> m = { // nested list-initialization {1, "a"}, {2, {'a', 'b', 'c'} }, {3, s1} }; std::cout << f({"hello", "world"}).first // list-initialization in function call << '\n'; const int (&ar)[2] = {1,2}; // binds a lvalue reference to a temporary array int&& r1 = {1}; // binds a rvalue reference to a temporary int // int& r2 = {2}; // error: cannot bind rvalue to a non-const lvalue ref // int bad{1.0}; // error: narrowing conversion unsigned char uc1{10}; // okay // unsigned char uc2{-1}; // error: narrowing conversion Foo f; std::cout << n0 << ' ' << n1 << ' ' << n2 << '\n' << s1 << ' ' << s2 << ' ' << s3 << '\n'; for(auto p: m) std::cout << p.first << ' ' << p.second << '\n'; for(auto n: f.mem) std::cout << n << ' '; for(auto n: f.mem2) std::cout << n << ' '; }
Output:
world 0 1 1 abcd cd aa 1 a 2 abc 3 abcd 1 2 3 -1 -2 -3
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
CWG 1467 | C++14 | same-type initialization of aggregates and char arrays was prohibited | same-type initialization allowed |
CWG 1467 | C++14 | std::initializer_list constructors had priority over copy constructors for single-element lists | single-element lists initialize directly |