I am writing my own string class for really just for learning and cementing some knowledge. I have everything working except I want to have a constructor that uses move semantics with an std::string.
Within my constructor I need to copy and null out the std::string data pointers and other things, it needs to be left in an empty but valid state, without deleting the data the string points to, how do I do this?
So far I have this
class String
{
private:
char* mpData;
unsigned int mLength;
public:
String( std::string&& str)
:mpData(nullptr), mLength(0)
{
// need to copy the memory pointer from std::string to this->mpData
// need to null out the std::string memory pointer
//str.clear(); // can't use clear because it deletes the memory
}
~String()
{
delete[] mpData;
mLength = 0;
}
There is no way to do this. The implementation of
std::stringis implementation-defined. Every implementation is different.Further, there is no guarantee that the string will be contained in a dynamically allocated array. Some
std::stringimplementations perform a small string optimization, where small strings are stored inside of thestd::stringobject itself.