std::aligned_union
Defined in header <type_traits>
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template< std::size_t Len, class... Types > struct aligned_union; |
(since C++11) (deprecated in C++23) |
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Provides the nested type type
, which is a trivial standard-layout type of a size and alignment suitable for use as uninitialized storage for an object of any of the types listed in Types
. The size of the storage is at least Len
. std::aligned_union
also determines the strictest (largest) alignment requirement among all Types
and makes it available as the constant alignment_value
.
If sizeof...(Types) == 0 or if any of the types in Types
is not a complete object type, the behavior is undefined.
It is implementation-defined whether any extended alignment is supported.
If the program adds specializations for std::aligned_union
, the behavior is undefined.
Contents |
[edit] Member types
Name | Definition |
type
|
a trivial and standard-layout type suitable for storage of any type from Types
|
[edit] Helper types
template< std::size_t Len, class... Types > using aligned_union_t = typename aligned_union<Len,Types...>::type; |
(since C++14) (deprecated in C++23) |
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[edit] Member constants
alignment_value [static] |
the strictest alignment requirement of all Types (public static member constant) |
[edit] Possible implementation
#include <algorithm> template<std::size_t Len, class... Types> struct aligned_union { static constexpr std::size_t alignment_value = std::max({alignof(Types)...}); struct type { alignas(alignment_value) char _s[std::max({Len, sizeof(Types)...})]; }; }; |
[edit] Example
#include <iostream> #include <string> #include <type_traits> int main() { std::cout << sizeof(std::aligned_union_t<0, char>) << ' ' // 1 << sizeof(std::aligned_union_t<2, char>) << ' ' // 2 << sizeof(std::aligned_union_t<2, char[3]>) << ' ' // 3 (!) << sizeof(std::aligned_union_t<3, char[4]>) << ' ' // 4 << sizeof(std::aligned_union_t<1, char, int, double>) << ' ' // 8 << sizeof(std::aligned_union_t<12, char, int, double>) << '\n'; // 16 (!) using var_t = std::aligned_union<16, int, std::string>; std::cout << "var_t::alignment_value = " << var_t::alignment_value << '\n' << "sizeof(var_t::type) = " << sizeof(var_t::type) << '\n'; var_t::type aligned_storage; int* int_ptr = new(&aligned_storage) int(42); // placement new std::cout << "*int_ptr = " << *int_ptr << '\n'; std::string* string_ptr = new(&aligned_storage) std::string("bar"); std::cout << "*string_ptr = " << *string_ptr << '\n'; *string_ptr = "baz"; std::cout << "*string_ptr = " << *string_ptr << '\n'; string_ptr->~basic_string(); }
Possible output:
1 2 3 4 8 16 var_t::alignment_value = 8 sizeof(var_t::type) = 32 *int_ptr = 42 *string_ptr = bar *string_ptr = baz
[edit] 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 2979 | C++11 | complete type was not required | requires complete types |
[edit] See also
(C++11) |
obtains the type's alignment requirements (class template) |
(C++11)(deprecated in C++23) |
defines the type suitable for use as uninitialized storage for types of given size (class template) |