Say I have an array std::vector<Foo>
, and I want to iterate over all my foos and do stuff do them like so:
for (auto foo : vecFoo)
foo.x = 10;
This ends up doing nothing because it's making a local copy of the contents of vecFoo instead of a reference to it. The correct loop is as follows:
for (auto& foo : vecFoo)
foo.x = 10;
This is a mistake I've made a few times now, so I'd like to find a solution for it that will catch me when I get it wrong. I would be happy with either something I can do to the struct or a warning flag I can turn on. I've tried making Foo
's copy constructor private, but then I end up being unable do push_back
or emplace_back
, which is clearly not what I want.
std::fill
. Problem gone! :-)emplace_back
shouldn't use a copy constructor, it should use the move constructor.&