cppreference is not accurate about map::emplace_hint()
. However it should be excused for being so, as at one point prior to C++11, the draft explicitly granted permission for the implementation to ignore the hint:
From N3225, Table 102:
... Implementations are permitted to ignore the hint.
Fortunately this was corrected by LWG 1253 and in C++11 and forward reads:
... The element is inserted as close as possible to the position just prior to p
.
logarithmic in general, but amortized constant if the element is inserted right before p
So the "hint" has teeth now. It shall be respected. Though note, these comments only apply to the associative containers (map, multimap, set, multiset).
In C++98/03 the "hint" was improperly used for insert
. But that was corrected by N1780, and that wording was subsequently adopted for emplace_hint
.
Implementations continue to be permitted to ignore the hint for the unordered containers. And this is for good reason. There is no good implementation strategy for taking advantage of the hint for the unordered containers. The hint is there just to provide compatibility with the associative containers in container-generic code.
Update
Somewhere over the years cppreference has updated its documentation and is now correct:
Inserts a new element to the container as close as possible to the position just before hint.
allocate
.