1

I have this class:

class MyClass{
    public:
        shared_ptr<X> a;
        shared_ptr<Y> b;
        std::string c;
        std::vector<double> d;
        std::vector<shared_ptr<Z>> e;
        int f;
};

and when I compile on VS2012 with the switch to see the class layout I get this:

1>  class MyClass   size(128):
1>      +---
1>   0  | {vfptr}
1>   8  | ?$shared_ptr@VX@@ a
1>  24  | ?$shared_ptr@VY@@ b
1>  40  | ?$basic_string@DU?$char_traits@D@std@@V?$allocator@D@2@ c
1>  72  | ?$vector@NV?$allocator@N@std@@ d
1>  96  | ?$vector@V?$shared_ptr@Z@@@boost@@V?$allocator@V?$shared_ptr@VZ@@@boost@@@std@@ e
1>  120 | f
1>      | <alignment member> (size=4)
1>      +---

It implies data member c is 32 bytes.

However, if I do sizeof(std::string) on my platform (Win 7 64), with MSVC11 I get 40 bytes.

Why does sizeof() give me 40 but the above compiler memory layout imply 32?

6
  • Why does it show a vtable pointer when the class with no virtual functions?
    – Moby Disk
    Jul 24, 2014 at 19:24
  • @MobyDisk I removed the methods to concentrate on the data members.
    – user997112
    Jul 24, 2014 at 19:27
  • @user997112: Don't remove things that you assume are unimportant. Show us the exact code you compiled, and the exact output you get for that code. Jul 24, 2014 at 20:01
  • And the exact compilation options. In the Visual C++ implementation, the sizes of Standard Library types may vary depending on compilation options. Jul 24, 2014 at 20:06
  • Does this class layout show any padding that might be there?
    – triple_r
    Jul 24, 2014 at 20:14

1 Answer 1

-1

data member c is probably a pointer to the string object. Since std::string stores a string of variable size, there is no way you can fit anything you want in that space.

So it is a pointer, managed by the language and not by you.

1
  • .. and a pointer is 40 bytes? It's some padding issue (==member alignment, pragma pack's and such). Hope the OP would clarify the exact setting. Jul 25, 2014 at 19:35

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