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C++ named requirements: Erasable (since C++11)

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | named req
 
 
C++ named requirements
 

Specifies that an object of the type can be destroyed by a given Allocator.

Contents

Requirements

Given the following types, values and expressions:

Type Definition
T an object type
A an allocator type
X a container type satisfying all following conditions:
  • X::value_type is the same as T.
  • X::allocator_type is the same as std::allocator_traits<A>::rebind_alloc<T>.
Value Definition
m an lvalue of type A
p a pointer of type T*

If the expression std::allocator_traits<A>::destroy(m, p) is well-formed, T is Erasable from X.

Notes

All standard library containers require that their value types satisfy Erasable.

With the default allocator, this requirement is equivalent to the validity of p->~T(), which accepts class types with accessible destructors and all scalar types, but rejects array types, function types, reference types, and void.

(until C++20)

With the default allocator, this requirement is equivalent to the validity of std::destroy_at(p), which accepts class types with accessible destructors and all scalar types, as well as arrays thereof.

(since C++20)

Although it is required that customized destroy is used when destroying elements of std::basic_string until C++23, all implementations only used the default mechanism. The requirement is corrected by P1072R10 to match existing practice.

Defect reports

The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.

DR Applied to Behavior as published Correct behavior
N3346 C++11 there was no requirement to specify whether a type
whose objects can be destroyed using allocators
added the requirement

See also

CopyInsertable
MoveInsertable
EmplaceConstructible
Destructible