I'm in a discussion at work as to how to properly handle containers as parameters.
We have a function that takes in a container parameter, and wants to return the container filled ONLY with what the function puts into it:
class bar;
void foo(std::vector<bar> &bars)
{
//do stuff that fills bars.
//exceptions may be thrown.
//we may also legally return early
return;
}
On one side of the discussion, we have people that say we should bars.clear()
first and then run the function.
For example:
void foo(std::vector<bar> &bars)
{
bars.clear();
//do stuff that fills bars.
//exceptions may be thrown.
//we may also legally return early
return;
}
My own preference is to try to reach the strong exception guarantee as closely as I can, which means making a local container, filling that and swapping before returning, but otherwise leaving bars
untouched.
For example:
void foo(std::vector<bar> &bars)
{
std::vector<bar> localBars;
//do stuff that fills localBars.
//exceptions may be thrown.
//we may also legally return early
if (returnEarly)
{
bars.swap(localBars);
return;
}
//do more stuff that may change localBars
bars.swap(localBars);
return;
}
The first example is the 'classic' method; of clearing your parameters before doing anything and going from there.
The second method, to me, sets up a strong exception guarantee (assuming nothing else the function does can change internal states), and avoids a clear() call.
Are there any advantages or disadvantages to picking one method over the other one?
Note that for this function, a strong exception guarantee isn't required; if the function fails nothing in the parameters or anything else it does will matter by the time it gets up to the exception handler.