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Home/ Questions/Q 6173219
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T23:32:02+00:00 2026-05-23T23:32:02+00:00

I’m working with a user-defined quantity of bits (I’m holding a three-dimensional array of

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I’m working with a user-defined quantity of bits (I’m holding a three-dimensional array of bits, so the size increases cubically – assume no less then 512 bits), and need to flip them each individually. Right now, just on a computer, I’m using the bool type, since memory isn’t an issue. I do plan to move the code to a microcontroller in the future, and so processing power and memory requirements may be an issue. Right now though, I just want speed.

I then found the std::bitset object from the C++ STL, but I can’t define a bitset’s size at runtime. I then found that the std::vector<bool> has a special initializer to store them as bits (instead of entire bytes, or 4 bytes) but then found this section in Wikipedia:

The Standard Library defines a specialization of the vector template
for bool. The description of this specialization indicates that the
implementation should pack the elements so that every bool only uses
one bit of memory. This is widely considered a mistake. […] There is a general consensus among the C++ Standard Committee and the Library Working Group that vector<bool> should be deprecated and subsequently removed from the standard library, while the functionality will be reintroduced under a different name.

Now, you can probably see my want for using a vector<bool> object, but after reading that, I’m considering using something else. The only problem is that I’m not sure what to use. I was curious though why they state that the functionality should be re-introduced (albeit under a different name).

So, my question is, would the use of vector<bool> objects be acceptable (being that they are a part of the STL)? Are they a part of the C++ standard?

If their use is not acceptable, is there an acceptable, alternative solution (outside me defining a special container myself)? I have a few ideas myself, but I’m just curious if anyone has a better solution. Also, I would like to avoid using large libraries (again, I want to eventually port this code to a microcontroller).

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T23:32:02+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 11:32 pm

    There’s nothing wrong with vector<bool>, except that it isn’t equivalent to a vector<T> were T is the integer type equivalent to bool. This only shows in performance (CPUs only access bytes at a time, where in a vector<bool> every element is stored in one bit) and memory access (a reference to a first element of a vector<bool> is not equivalent to an array like with any other vector<T>.

    It is part of the Standard, unfortunately: see section 23.3.7 (C++0x FDIS).

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