1

I have a class that contains a std::mutex so it is not movable or copiable.

struct MyObject {
  MyObject(std::string s_) : s(s_) {};
  std::mutex lock;
  std::thread worker;
  std::string s;
};

I can easily add this object to this map:

 std::map<int, MyObject> my_map;
 my_map.emplace(std::piecewise_construct, 
                std::forward_as_tuple(5),
                std::forward_as_tuple("string0"));

But I would like to use a std::array to hold several of them like such:

std::map<int, std::array<MyObject, 3>> my_map;

If MyObject is movable, then I can do:

my_map.emplace(4, {MyObject("string0"), MyObject("string1"), MyObject("string2")});

but this doesn't work (as expected) when the MyObject isn't movable. I can't fall back to piecewise construction since the std::array cannot be constructed from a tuple of 3 strings.

 my_map.emplace(std::piecewise_construct, 
                std::forward_as_tuple(4),
                std::forward_as_tuple("string0", "string1", "string2"));

Is there a way to construct a std::array of non-moveable objects in place in the map?

I'm using these questions as a reference. Is there a way to combine the answers?

emplace and unordered_map<?, std::array<?, N>>

How to allocate a non-copyable and non-movable object into std::map?

I've also tried:

std::array<MyObject, 3> list = {
  MyObject("string0"),
  MyObject("string1"),
  MyObject("string2")
};

my_map.emplace(4, std::move(list));

with the idea that the list should be moveable, but this also does not work.

10
  • 3
    You can wrap the std::thread in a std::unique_ptr to make it movable.
    – super
    Dec 8, 2021 at 6:26
  • 2
    Btw, is the first Foo meant to be MyObject?
    – Enlico
    Dec 8, 2021 at 6:26
  • Thanks! I edited the question to fix the naming issue.
    – TheBat
    Dec 8, 2021 at 6:28
  • 1
    Does this answer your question? How should I deal with mutexes in movable types in C++?
    – kiner_shah
    Dec 8, 2021 at 6:56
  • @kiner_shah I don't ever want to actually move the object that contains the mutex. It will only ever live in the map that contains it. I only need to move it in during construction.
    – TheBat
    Dec 8, 2021 at 7:03

1 Answer 1

1

With custom array, you might do

template <typename T, std::size_t N>
struct MyArray
{
    template <typename... Us>
    MyArray(Us&&... args) : arr{ std::forward<Us>(args)...} {}

    std::array<T, N> arr;
};

void foo()
{
    std::map<int, MyArray<MyObject, 3>> my_map;
    my_map.emplace(std::piecewise_construct,
                   std::forward_as_tuple(4),
                   std::forward_as_tuple(std::string("string0"),
                                         std::string("string1"),
                                         std::string("string2")));
}

Demo

2
  • I modified it slightly. Previously I was using: using MapEntry = std::array<MyObject, 3>; I was able to swap that out for: struct MapEntry : std::array<MyObject, 3> { template <typename... Us> LeaderMapEntry(Us&&... args) : std::array<MyObject, 3>{ std::forward<Us>(args)...} {} }; And it works!
    – TheBat
    Dec 8, 2021 at 19:10
  • This is actually pretty cool and forwards the arguments exactly like I wanted. Thanks a bunch!!
    – TheBat
    Dec 8, 2021 at 19:17

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