std::to_address
Defined in header <memory>
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template< class Ptr > constexpr auto to_address( const Ptr& p ) noexcept; |
(1) | (since C++20) |
template< class T > constexpr T* to_address( T* p ) noexcept; |
(2) | (since C++20) |
Obtain the address represented by p without forming a reference to the object pointed to by p.
T
is a function type, the program is ill-formed. Otherwise, returns p unmodified.Contents |
Parameters
p | - | fancy or raw pointer |
Return value
Raw pointer that represents the same address as p does.
Possible implementation
template<class T> constexpr T* to_address(T* p) noexcept { static_assert(!std::is_function_v<T>); return p; } template<class T> constexpr auto to_address(const T& p) noexcept { if constexpr (requires{ std::pointer_traits<T>::to_address(p); }) return std::pointer_traits<T>::to_address(p); else return std::to_address(p.operator->()); } |
Notes
std::to_address
can be used even when p does not reference storage that has an object constructed in it, in which case std::addressof(*p) cannot be used because there is no valid object for the parameter of std::addressof to bind to.
The fancy pointer overload of std::to_address
inspects the std::pointer_traits<Ptr> specialization. If instantiating that specialization is itself ill-formed (typically because element_type
cannot be defined), that results in a hard error outside the immediate context and renders the program ill-formed.
std::to_address
may additionally be used on iterators that satisfy std::contiguous_iterator.
Feature-test macro | Value | Std | Feature |
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__cpp_lib_to_address |
201711L | (C++20) | Utility to convert a pointer to a raw pointer (std::to_address )
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Example
#include <memory> template<class A> auto allocator_new(A& a) { auto p = a.allocate(1); try { std::allocator_traits<A>::construct(a, std::to_address(p)); } catch (...) { a.deallocate(p, 1); throw; } return p; } template<class A> void allocator_delete(A& a, typename std::allocator_traits<A>::pointer p) { std::allocator_traits<A>::destroy(a, std::to_address(p)); a.deallocate(p, 1); } int main() { std::allocator<int> a; auto p = allocator_new(a); allocator_delete(a, p); }
See also
(C++11) |
provides information about pointer-like types (class template) |
[static] (C++20)(optional) |
obtains a raw pointer from a fancy pointer (inverse of pointer_to ) (public static member function of std::pointer_traits<Ptr> )
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