It’s been a while since I programmed in C++, and after coming from python, I feel soooo in a straight jacket, ok I’m not gonna rant.
I have a couple of functions that act as ‘pipes’, accepting a list as input, returning another list as output (based on the input),
this is in concept, but in practice, I’m using std::vector to represent the list, is that acceptable?
further more, I’m not using any pointers, so I’m using std::vector<SomeType> the_list(some_size); as the variable, and returning it directly, i.e. return the_list;
P.S. So far it’s all ok, the project size is small and this doesn’t seem to affect performance, but I still want to get some input/advice on this, because I feel like I’m writing python in C++.
The only thing I can see is that your forcing a copy of the list you return. It would be more efficient to do something like:
Because you pass in the list you want to return, you avoid the extra copy.
Edit: This is an old reply. If you can use a modern C++ compiler with move semantics, you don’t need to worry about this. Of course, this answer still applies if the object you are returning DOES NOT have move semantics.