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I want to know if this code is safe and doesnt have any undefined behavior.

 QueueMap::const_iterator it = m_3playersQueue.find(s->m_GameCode);
 if(it == m_3playersQueue.end())
 {
     std::deque<Session*> stack;
     stack.push_back(s);

     m_3playersQueue[s->m_GameCode] = stack;
     return;
 }

 const_cast<std::deque<Session*>&>(it->second).push_back(s);

 QueueMap is of type std::tr1::unordered_map< uint32, std::deque<Session*> >

3 Answers 3

4

Your code contradicts itself. Just use QueueMap::iterator instead of QueueMap::const_iterator.

What you're doing is explicitly making it const, then const_casting away the constness. Why bother?

6
  • If m_3playersQueeu is const, then find returns a const_iterator, presumably.
    – Chris
    May 19, 2012 at 17:17
  • I know about it. I know that i can just simply change const_iterator to iterator. But that code was interesting me. const_iterator is a little bit faster than iterator - thats the reason
    – user823738
    May 19, 2012 at 17:17
  • 7
    @quarry: Sounds like you may be prematurely optimizing. May 19, 2012 at 17:18
  • @MahmoudAl-Qudsi just my instinct x) but the idea that const_iterator is faster isnt mine.
    – user823738
    May 19, 2012 at 17:24
  • 6
    @quarry: well, whoever came up with the idea, there's zero reason to expect it to be true. And that's one reason why you should measure when optimizing.
    – jalf
    May 19, 2012 at 17:27
1

Yes, it is safe. Even if a const_iterator is different from an iterator, the objects in the map are the same. As long as all the map contents were created as mutable std::deque<Session*> objects, it's OK to cast the constness away.

Of course, it's possible you're violating some invariant the constness was meant to convey, but that's possible with any const_cast taken in isolation.

1

The code might be a bit simpler to understand in the following form: Always insert and update:

std::pair<QueueMap::iterator, bool> p =
  m_3playersQueue.insert(std::make_pair(s->m_GameCode, std::deque<Session*>()));

p.first->second.push_back(s);

The only inefficiency is when the element already exists, in which case you have to throw away an empty deque. But small, short-lived heap allocations aren't usually expensive, so you should profile carefully to justify more complicated code. Think about how long it would take your successor to work through and debug your code!

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