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Home/ Questions/Q 6708883
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T07:48:49+00:00 2026-05-26T07:48:49+00:00

I was looking into std::set code. I see insert signature as _Pairib insert(const value_type&

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I was looking into std::set code. I see insert signature as _Pairib insert(const value_type& _Val). Why is the input parameter passed by reference? I know that standardcContainers copy their elements into memory of the container. Does anybody know how this is achieved? Where do allocators enter the picture? Any small code/pseudocode which explains how the elements are stored/inserted would be appreciated. I am interested in understanding how the copy is done.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T07:48:50+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 7:48 am

    The allocator is a template parameter. Look at the definition here:

    template < class Key, class Compare = less<Key>,
               class Allocator = allocator<Key> > class set;
    

    If you don’t specify allocator of your own, it will take the default allocator (which would probably be just a new).

    You can use STL containors on classes with public copy constructors, destructors and assignment operators. See here:

    Elements inserted into an STL container can be of any object type that
    supplies a public copy constructor, a public destructor, and a public
    assignment operator. The destructor may not throw an exception.
    Furthermore, associative containers such as set and map must have a
    public comparison operator defined, which is operator< by default.
    Some operations on containers might also require a public default
    constructor and a public equivalence operator.

    So basically the copy is done by using the above public member functions that you implement in your classes.

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