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Goal : Have a buffer (fixed size) of memory in which I can store any type of structs. Initialized to 0s

Question : How would it work?

Here is what I was thinking up to now.

void Main()
{
   void* BufferHead = CreatBuffer(1024)
}

void* CreateBuffer(int ByteCount)
{
     void* Head = operator new (std::size_t(ByteCount));
     memset(Head, 0, ByteCount);
     return Head;
}

void* AddAt(int ByteIdx, void* DataToAdd, size_t DataSize )
{        
   return memcpy(BufferHead + ByteIdx, DataToAdd, DataSize);
}

void RemoveAt(int ByteIdx, size_t DataSize)
{
   memset(BufferHead+ByteIdx, 0, DataSize);
}

I did't do any of the "memory fragmentation/management" nor the smart pointer to reset ptr to null. I'd like to start with a solid add add/remove/alloc interface.

EDIT:

Intend purpose of this question is to allow me to store various data types (struct, basic types, objects) of different size in a sequential way so that I can read it forward and backward in a cache friendly way as it will be "processed" between 30 and 60 times a second. I was thinking of iterating through the buffer with a Double Linked List of Node and simply put all the data where it fits at any time in the buffer.

I can use up to c++ 14 features.

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  • 8
    What's wrong with std::vector? Or any other standard container? Dec 8, 2017 at 13:15
  • 2
    ....or with std::any, isnt that what you are looking for? Dec 8, 2017 at 13:15
  • 1
    You can only memcpy PODs into such a buffer.
    – user2672107
    Dec 8, 2017 at 13:15
  • 2
    @manni66 That's not true. You can do it with all TriviallyCopyable types, not only PODs. (§ 6.9 [basic.types])
    – Jodocus
    Dec 8, 2017 at 13:21
  • 2
    You are asking how to solve a problem that has been solved in the 80s and 90s and become part of international standards. I would go with "lacks research effort" here.
    – nwp
    Dec 8, 2017 at 13:24

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