I'd like to avoid unnecessary copies. I'm aiming for something along the lines of:
std::ifstream testFile( "testfile", "rb" );
std::vector<char> fileContents;
int fileSize = getFileSize( testFile );
fileContents.reserve( fileSize );
testFile.read( &fileContents[0], fileSize );
(which doesn't work because reserve doesn't actually insert anything into the vector, so I can't access [0]).
Of course, std::vector<char> fileContents(fileSize) works, but there is an overhead of initializing all elements (fileSize can be rather big). Same for resize().
This question is not so much about how important that overhead would be. Rather, I'm just curious to know if there's another way.
push_backand you want to avoid the cost of zeroing the buffer required by usingresize, don't use astd::vectorat all: use aboost::scoped_arrayor something similar. – James McNellis Jan 21 '11 at 17:32