Here we will make an attempt at describing the non-Standard extensions to
the library. Some of these are from SGI's STL, some of these are GNU's,
and some just seemed to appear on the doorstep.
Before you leap in and use these, be aware of two things:
- Non-Standard means exactly that. The behavior, and the very
existence, of these extensions may change with little or no
warning. (Ideally, the really good ones will appear in the next
revision of C++.) Also, other platforms, other compilers, other
versions of g++ or libstdc++ may not recognize these names, or
treat them differently, or...
- You should know how to access
these headers properly.
Contents
The SGI headers
<hash_map>
<hash_set>
<rope>
<slist>
<rb_tree>
are all here;
<hash_map>
and <hash_set>
are deprecated but available as backwards-compatible extensions,
as discussed further below. <rope>
is the
SGI specialization for large strings ("rope,"
"large strings," get it? Love that geeky humor.)
<slist>
is a singly-linked list, for when the
doubly-linked list<>
is too much space
overhead, and <rb_tree>
exposes the red-black
tree classes used in the implementation of the standard maps and
sets.
Each of the associative containers map, multimap, set, and multiset
have a counterpart which uses a
hashing
function to do the arranging, instead of a strict weak ordering
function. The classes take as one of their template parameters a
function object that will return the hash value; by default, an
instantiation of
hash.
You should specialize this functor for your class, or define your own,
before trying to use one of the hashing classes.
The hashing classes support all the usual associative container
functions, as well as some extra constructors specifying the number
of buckets, etc.
Why would you want to use a hashing class instead of the
"normal" implementations? Matt Austern writes:
[W]ith a well chosen hash function, hash tables
generally provide much better average-case performance than binary
search trees, and much worse worst-case performance. So if your
implementation has hash_map, if you don't mind using nonstandard
components, and if you aren't scared about the possibility of
pathological cases, you'll probably get better performance from
hash_map.
Okay, about the SGI hashing classes... these classes have been
deprecated by the unordered_set, unordered_multiset, unordered_map,
unordered_multimap containers in TR1 and the upcoming C++0x, and
may be removed in future releases.
Return to top of page or
to the FAQ.
Some of the classes in the Standard Library have additional
publicly-available members, and some classes are themselves not in
the standard. Of those, some are intended purely for the implementors,
for example, additional typedefs. Those won't be described here
(or anywhere else).
- The extensions added by SGI are so numerous that they have
their own page. Since the SGI STL is no
longer actively maintained, we will try and keep this code working
ourselves.
- Extensions allowing
filebuf
s to be constructed from
stdio types are described in the
chapter 27 notes.
- The C++ Standard Library Technical Report adds many new features
to the library, see FAQ 5.5.
Return to top of page or
to the FAQ.
Currently libstdc++ uses the concept checkers from the Boost
library to perform optional
compile-time checking of template instantiations of the standard
containers. They are described in the linked-to page.
Return to top of page or
to the FAQ.
Everybody's got issues. Even the C++ Standard Library.
The Library Working Group, or LWG, is the ISO subcommittee responsible
for making changes to the library. They periodically publish an
Issues List containing problems and possible solutions. As they reach
a consensus on proposed solutions, we often incorporate the solution
into libstdc++.
Here are the issues which have resulted in code changes to the library.
The links are to the specific defect reports from a partial
copy of the Issues List. You can read the full version online
at the ISO C++
Committee homepage, linked to on the
GCC "Readings"
page. If
you spend a lot of time reading the issues, we recommend downloading
the ZIP file and reading them locally.
(NB: partial copy means that not all links within
the lwg-*.html pages will work.
Specifically, links to defect reports that have not been accorded full
DR status will probably break. Rather than trying to mirror the
entire issues list on our overworked web server, we recommend you go
to the LWG homepage instead.)
If a DR is not listed here, we may simply not have gotten to it yet;
feel free to submit a patch. Search the include/bits and src
directories for appearances of _GLIBCXX_RESOLVE_LIB_DEFECTS for
examples of style. Note that we usually do not make changes to the code
until an issue has reached DR status.
- 5:
string::compare specification questionable
- This should be two overloaded functions rather than a single function.
- 17:
Bad bool parsing
- Apparently extracting Boolean values was messed up...
- 19:
"Noconv" definition too vague
- If
codecvt::do_in
returns noconv
there are
no changes to the values in [to, to_limit)
.
- 22:
Member open vs flags
- Re-opening a file stream does not clear the state flags.
- 25:
String operator<< uses width() value wrong
- Padding issues.
- 48:
Use of non-existent exception constructor
- An instance of
ios_base::failure
is constructed instead.
- 49:
Underspecification of ios_base::sync_with_stdio
- The return type is the previous state of synchronization.
- 50:
Copy constructor and assignment operator of ios_base
- These members functions are declared
private
and are
thus inaccessible. Specifying the correct semantics of
"copying stream state" was deemed too complicated.
- 60:
What is a formatted input function?
- This DR made many widespread changes to
basic_istream
and basic_ostream
all of which have been implemented.
- 63:
Exception-handling policy for unformatted output
- Make the policy consistent with that of formatted input, unformatted
input, and formatted output.
- 68:
Extractors for char* should store null at end
- And they do now. An editing glitch in the last item in the list of
[27.6.1.2.3]/7.
- 74:
Garbled text for codecvt::do_max_length
- The text of the standard was gibberish. Typos gone rampant.
- 75:
Contradiction in codecvt::length's argument types
- Change the first parameter to
stateT&
and implement
the new effects paragraph.
- 83:
string::npos vs. string::max_size()
- Safety checks on the size of the string should test against
max_size()
rather than npos
.
- 90:
Incorrect description of operator>> for strings
- The effect contain
isspace(c,getloc())
which must be
replaced by isspace(c,is.getloc())
.
- 91:
Description of operator>> and getline() for string<>
might cause endless loop
- They behave as a formatted input function and as an unformatted
input function, respectively (except that
getline
is
not required to set gcount
).
- 103:
set::iterator is required to be modifiable, but this allows
modification of keys.
- For associative containers where the value type is the same as
the key type, both
iterator
and const_iterator
are constant iterators.
- 109:
Missing binders for non-const sequence elements
- The
binder1st
and binder2nd
didn't have an
operator()
taking a non-const parameter.
- 110:
istreambuf_iterator::equal not const
- This was not a const member function. Note that the DR says to
replace the function with a const one; we have instead provided an
overloaded version with identical contents.
- 117:
basic_ostream uses nonexistent num_put member functions
num_put::put()
was overloaded on the wrong types.
- 118:
basic_istream uses nonexistent num_get member functions
- Same as 117, but for
num_get::get()
.
- 129:
Need error indication from seekp() and seekg()
- These functions set
failbit
on error now.
- 136:
seekp, seekg setting wrong streams?
seekp
should only set the output stream, and
seekg
should only set the input stream.
- 167:
Improper use of traits_type::length()
op<<
with a const char*
was
calculating an incorrect number of characters to write.
- 169:
Bad efficiency of overflow() mandated
- Grow efficiently the internal array object.
- 171:
Strange seekpos() semantics due to joint position
- Quite complex to summarize...
- 181:
make_pair() unintended behavior
- This function used to take its arguments as reference-to-const, now
it copies them (pass by value).
- 195:
Should basic_istream::sentry's constructor ever set eofbit?
- Yes, it can, specifically if EOF is reached while skipping whitespace.
- 211:
operator>>(istream&, string&) doesn't set failbit
- If nothing is extracted into the string,
op>>
now
sets failbit
(which can cause an exception, etc., etc.).
- 214:
set::find() missing const overload
- Both
set
and multiset
were missing
overloaded find, lower_bound, upper_bound, and equal_range functions
for const instances.
- 231:
Precision in iostream?
- For conversion from a floating-point type,
str.precision()
is specified in the conversion specification.
- 233:
Insertion hints in associative containers
- Implement N1780, first check before then check after, insert as close
to hint as possible.
- 235:
No specification of default ctor for reverse_iterator
- The declaration of
reverse_iterator
lists a default constructor.
However, no specification is given what this constructor should do.
- 241:
Does unique_copy() require CopyConstructible and Assignable?
- Add a helper for forward_iterator/output_iterator, fix the existing
one for input_iterator/output_iterator to not rely on Assignability.
- 243:
get and getline when sentry reports failure
- Store a null character only if the character array has a non-zero size.
- 251:
basic_stringbuf missing allocator_type
- This nested typedef was originally not specified.
- 253:
valarray helper functions are almost entirely useless
- Make the copy constructor and copy-assignment operator declarations
public in gslice_array, indirect_array, mask_array, slice_array; provide
definitions.
- 265:
std::pair::pair() effects overly restrictive
- The default ctor would build its members from copies of temporaries;
now it simply uses their respective default ctors.
- 266:
bad_exception::~bad_exception() missing Effects clause
- The
bad_
* classes no longer have destructors (they
are trivial), since no description of them was ever given.
- 271:
basic_iostream missing typedefs
- The typedefs it inherits from its base classes can't be used, since
(for example)
basic_iostream<T>::traits_type
is ambiguous.
- 275:
Wrong type in num_get::get() overloads
- Similar to 118.
- 280:
Comparison of reverse_iterator to const reverse_iterator
- Add global functions with two template parameters.
(NB: not added for now a templated assignment operator)
- 292:
Effects of a.copyfmt (a)
- If
(this == &rhs)
do nothing.
- 300:
List::merge() specification incomplete
- If
(this == &x)
do nothing.
- 303:
Bitset input operator underspecified
- Basically, compare the input character to
is.widen(0)
and is.widen(1)
.
- 305:
Default behavior of codecvt<wchar_t, char, mbstate_t>::length()
- Do not specify what
codecvt<wchar_t, char, mbstate_t>::do_length
must return.
- 328:
Bad sprintf format modifier in money_put<>::do_put()
- Change the format string to "%.0Lf".
- 365:
Lack of const-qualification in clause 27
- Add const overloads of
is_open
.
- 389:
Const overload of valarray::operator[] returns by value
- Change it to return a
const T&
.
- 402:
Wrong new expression in [some_]allocator::construct
- Replace "new" with "::new".
- 409:
Closing an fstream should clear the error state
- Have
open
clear the error flags.
- 431:
Swapping containers with unequal allocators
- Implement Option 3, as per N1599.
- 432:
stringbuf::overflow() makes only one write position
available
- Implement the resolution, beyond DR 169.
- 434:
bitset::to_string() hard to use
- Add three overloads, taking fewer template arguments.
- 438:
Ambiguity in the "do the right thing" clause
- Implement the resolution, basically cast less.
- 453:
basic_stringbuf::seekoff need not always fail for an empty stream
- Don't fail if the next pointer is null and newoff is zero.
- 455:
cerr::tie() and wcerr::tie() are overspecified
- Initialize cerr tied to cout and wcerr tied to wcout.
- 464:
Suggestion for new member functions in standard containers
- Add
data()
to std::vector
and
at(const key_type&)
to std::map
.
- 508:
Bad parameters for ranlux64_base_01
- Fix the parameters.
- 512:
Seeding subtract_with_carry_01 from a single unsigned long
- Construct a
linear_congruential
engine and seed with it.
- 526:
Is it undefined if a function in the standard changes in
parameters?
- Use &value.
- 538:
241 again: Does unique_copy() require CopyConstructible
and Assignable?
- In case of input_iterator/output_iterator rely on Assignability of
input_iterator' value_type.
- 541:
shared_ptr template assignment and void
- Add an auto_ptr<void> specialization.
- 543:
valarray slice default constructor
- Follow the straightforward proposed resolution.
- 586:
string inserter not a formatted function
- Change it to be a formatted output function (i.e. catch exceptions).
- 596:
27.8.1.3 Table 112 omits "a+" and "a+b" modes
- Add the missing modes to fopen_mode.
- 660:
Missing bitwise operations
- Add the missing operations.
- 693:
std::bitset::all() missing
- Add it, consistently with the discussion.
- 695:
ctype<char>::classic_table() not accessible
- Make the member functions table and classic_table public.
Return to top of page or
to the FAQ.
See license.html for copying conditions.
Comments and suggestions are welcome, and may be sent to
the libstdc++ mailing list.