-1

I would like to know how to write a move assignment operator in the following case:

class Foo : public vector<int>
{
public:
  Foo(Foo&& other) : vector<int>(move(other)) {};
  Foo& operator=(Foo&& other){ ????? };
};

How's it done?

Thanks, Tom

4
  • 1
    There're special cases where inheriting from STL is recommended. This is not one.
    – 101010
    Jun 13, 2014 at 12:28
  • The class being derived from is irrelevant, other than it should be be copyable and moveable.
    – Tom Davies
    Jun 13, 2014 at 12:29
  • You're right it's a duplicate. I suppose my question is shorter and more direct, but it's still a duplicate.
    – Tom Davies
    Jun 13, 2014 at 12:35
  • Foo& operator = (Foo&&) & = default;
    – Casey
    Jun 13, 2014 at 13:26

1 Answer 1

4
class Foo
    : public vector<int>
{
public:
    auto operator=( Foo&& other )
        -> Foo&
    {
        vector<int>::operator=( move( other ) );
        return *this;
    };

    Foo( Foo&& other )
        : vector<int>( move( other ) )
    {};
};

Or just

class Foo
    : public vector<int>
{
public:
    auto operator=( Foo&& other ) -> Foo& = default;

    Foo( Foo&& other )
        : vector<int>( move( other ) )
    {};
};

I'm not sure of the rules for automatic generation of move assignment operator, and would currently not yet rely on the compiler implementing those rules correctly (as of June 2014).

2
  • why use the alternative function declaration syntax? does it matter? Jun 13, 2014 at 12:34
  • rather, since this is the only syntax that covers all cases, it's the main syntax. the old syntax is the alternate one, only supporting a subset of functions. why use an arbitrary mix of syntaxes instead of just using the main one everywhere. Jun 13, 2014 at 12:36

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