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Home/ Questions/Q 485221
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T01:22:46+00:00 2026-05-13T01:22:46+00:00

I have a DLL which needs to access data stored in STL containers in

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I have a DLL which needs to access data stored in STL containers in the host application. Because C++ has no standard ABI, and I want to support different compilers, the interface between the application and DLL basically has to remain plain-old-data.

For vectors this is relatively straightforward. You can simply return the memory block of the vector, because it is guaranteed to be contigious:

// To return vector<int> data
virtual void GetVectorData(const int*& ptr, size_t& count) const
{
    if (!vec.empty())
        ptr = &(vec.front());

    count = vec.size();
}

Now the DLL can have safe read-only access to the vector’s data via that interface. The DLL can also wrap this to copy the contents in to a vector for itself as well.

What about STL lists (and deques) though? Is there another straightforward way to allow access via a DLL boundary? Or will I have to resort to some kind of GetFirst()/GetNext() interface? I might need to do this for a lot of lists, so it’d be nice to have a solution as simple as vector’s.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T01:22:47+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 1:22 am

    Perhaps you can pass something like “handles” to list/deque iterators? These handle types would be opaque and declared in a header file you would ship to the users. Internally, you would need to map the handle values to list/deque iterators. Basically, the user would write code like:

    ListHandle lhi = GetListDataBegin();
    const ListHandle lhe = GetListDataEnd();
    
    while (lhi != lhe)
    {
      int value = GetListItem(lhi);
      ...
      lhi = GetNextListItem(lhi);
    }
    
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