I got the code from this link about allocator of array, i show the key code below, and for this question, I have deleted the constructor part, BUT I really don't know why I must assign the value ra
with *this
?? and if I just write ra()
, it will be wrong!
In my opinion, Because the class array_allocator
is inherited from std::allocator<T>
, and the copy constructor of std::allocator
does nothing.
and what is the type of ra
? I have noticed that
the type is different in c++17 and c++2a, because the "rebind
" struct have been deleted in c++2a, so in the previous version the type is std::allocator<int>
, but in c++ 2a, the type is array_allocator<int>
. as the demo show. so will this influence the result? I'm very confused, Sorry for my confusing logic. Any answers are welcome :)
#include <memory>
#include <type_traits>
template <typename T>
struct array_allocator : std::allocator<T>
{
template <typename C, typename ...Args>
typename std::enable_if<std::is_array<C>::value>::type destroy(C * p)
{
using U = typename std::remove_extent<C>::type;
using UAT = typename std::allocator_traits<array_allocator>::template rebind_traits<U>;
typename std::allocator_traits<array_allocator>::template rebind_alloc<U> ra(*this); ???
for (std::size_t i = 0, e = std::extent<C>::value; i != e; ++i)
{
UAT::destroy(ra, std::addressof((*p)[e - i - 1]));
}
}
template <typename C, typename ...Args>
typename std::enable_if<!std::is_array<C>::value>::type destroy(C * p)
{
p->~C();
}
};