Designing a new system from scratch. I'll be using the STL to store lists and maps of certain long-live objects.
Question: Should I ensure my objects have copy constructors and store copies of objects within my STL containers, or is it generally better to manage the life & scope myself and just store the pointers to those objects in my STL containers?
I realize this is somewhat short on details, but I'm looking for the "theoretical" better answer if it exists, since I know both of these solutions are possible.
Two very obvious disadvantage to playing with pointers: 1) I must manage allocation/deallocation of these objects myself in a scope beyond the STL. 2) I cannot create a temp object on the stack and add it to my containers.
Is there anything else I'm missing?
This question has been bugging me for a while.
I lean to storing pointers, but I have some additional requirements (SWIG lua wrappers) that might not apply to you.
The most important point in this post is to test it yourself, using your objects
I did this today to test the speed of calling a member function on a collection of 10 million objects, 500 times.
The function updates x and y based on xdir and ydir (all float member variables).
I used a std::list to hold both types of objects, and I found that storing the object in the list is slightly faster than using a pointer. On the other hand, the performance was very close, so it comes down to how they will be used in your application.
For reference, with -O3 on my hardware the pointers took 41 seconds to complete and the raw objects took 30 seconds to complete.
Since people are chiming in on the efficency of using pointers.
If you're considering using a std::vector and if updates are few and you often iterate over your collection and it's a non polymorphic type storing object "copies" will be more efficent since you'll get better locality of reference.
Otoh, if updates are common storing pointers will save the copy/relocation costs.
Using pointers will be more efficient since the containers will be only copying pointers around instead of full objects.
There's some useful information here about STL containers and smart pointers:
Why is it wrong to use std::auto_ptr<> with standard containers?
This really depends upon your situation.
If your objects are small, and doing a copy of the object is lightweight, then storing the data inside an stl container is straightforward and easier to manage in my opinion because you don't have to worry about lifetime management.
If you objects are large, and having a default constructor doesn't make sense, or copies of objects are expensive, then storing with pointers is probably the way to go.
If you decide to use pointers to objects, take a look at the Boost Pointer Container Library. This boost library wraps all the STL containers for use with dynamically allocated objects.
Each pointer container (for example ptr_vector) takes ownership of an object when it is added to the container, and manages the lifetime of those objects for you. You also access all the elements in a ptr_ container by reference. This lets you do things like
These classes wrap the STL containers and work with all of the STL algorithms, which is really handy.
There are also facilities for transferring ownership of a pointer in the container to the caller (via the release function in most of the containers).
If the objects are to be referred to elsewhere in the code, store in a vector of boost::shared_ptr. This ensures that pointers to the object will remain valid if you resize the vector.
Ie:
If noone else stores pointers to the objects, or the list doesn't grow and shrink, just store as plain-old objects:
Why not get the best of both worlds: do a container of smart pointers (such as
boost::shared_ptr
orstd::shared_ptr
). You don't have to manage the memory, and you don't have to deal with large copy operations.