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A move constructor is aconstructor which can be called with an argument of the same class type and copies the content of the argument, possibly mutating the argument.
Contents |
class-name ( parameter-list ); | (1) | ||||||||
class-name ( parameter-list ) function-body | (2) | ||||||||
class-name ( single-parameter-list ) = default; | (3) | ||||||||
class-name ( parameter-list ) = delete; | (4) | ||||||||
class-name :: class-name ( parameter-list ) function-body | (5) | ||||||||
class-name :: class-name ( single-parameter-list ) = default; | (6) | ||||||||
class-name | - | the class whose move constructor is being declared |
parameter-list | - | a non-emptyparameter list satisfying all following conditions:
|
single-parameter-list | - | aparameter list of only one parameter, which is of typeT&&,const T&&,volatile T&& orconstvolatile T&& and does not have a default argument |
function-body | - | thefunction body of the move constructor |
struct X{ X(X&& other);// move constructor// X(X other); // Error: incorrect parameter type}; union Y{ Y(Y&& other,int num=1);// move constructor with multiple parameters// Y(Y&& other, int num); // Error: `num` has no default argument};
The move constructor is typically called when an object isinitialized (bydirect-initialization orcopy-initialization) fromrvalue (xvalue or prvalue)(until C++17)xvalue(since C++17) of the same type, including
T
;T
andf isvoid f(T t);T
which has a move constructor.When the initializer is a prvalue, the move constructor call isoften optimized out(until C++17)never made(since C++17), seecopy elision.
Move constructors typically transfer the resources held by the argument (e.g. pointers to dynamically-allocated objects, file descriptors, TCP sockets, thread handles, etc.) rather than make copies of them, and leave the argument in some valid but otherwise indeterminate state. Since move constructor doesn’t change the lifetime of the argument, the destructor will typically be called on the argument at a later point. For example, moving from astd::string or from astd::vector may result in the argument being left empty. For some types, such asstd::unique_ptr, the moved-from state is fully specified.
If no user-defined move constructors are provided for a class type, and all of the following is true:
Then the compiler will declare a move constructor as a non-explicitinlinepublic member of its class with the signatureT::T(T&&).
A class can have multiple move constructors, e.g. bothT::T(const T&&) andT::T(T&&). If some user-defined move constructors are present, the user may still force the generation of the implicitly declared move constructor with the keyworddefault.
The implicitly-declared (or defaulted on its first declaration) move constructor has an exception specification as described indynamic exception specification(until C++17)noexcept specification(since C++17).
If the implicitly-declared move constructor is neither deleted nor trivial, it is defined (that is, a function body is generated and compiled) by the compiler ifODR-use orneeded for constant evaluation. For union types, the implicitly-defined move constructor copies the object representation (as bystd::memmove). For non-union class types, the move constructor performs full member-wise move of the object's direct base subobjects and member subobjects, in their initialization order, using direct initialization with anxvalue argument. For each non-static data member of a reference type, the move constructor binds the reference to the same object or function to which the source reference is bound.
If this satisfies the requirements of aconstexpr
constructor(until C++23)constexpr
function(since C++23), the generated move constructor isconstexpr.
The implicitly-declared or explicitly-defaulted move constructor for classT
is defined as deleted ifT
has apotentially constructed subobject of class typeM
(or possibly multi-dimensional array thereof) such that
M
has a destructor that is deleted or inaccessible from the copy constructor, orM
's move constructorSuch a constructor is ignored byoverload resolution (otherwise it would prevent copy-initialization from rvalue).
The move constructor for classT
is trivial if all of the following is true:
T
has no virtual member functions;T
has no virtual base classes;T
is trivial;T
is trivial.A trivial move constructor is a constructor that performs the same action as the trivial copy constructor, that is, makes a copy of the object representation as if bystd::memmove. All data types compatible with the C language are trivially movable.
A move constructor is eligible if it is not deleted. | (until C++20) |
A move constructor is eligible if all following conditions are satisfied:
| (since C++20) |
Triviality of eligible move constructors determines whether the class is animplicit-lifetime type, and whether the class is atrivially copyable type.
To make thestrong exception guarantee possible, user-defined move constructors should not throw exceptions. For example,std::vector relies onstd::move_if_noexcept to choose between move and copy when the elements need to be relocated.
If both copy and move constructors are provided and no other constructors are viable, overload resolution selects the move constructor if the argument is anrvalue of the same type (anxvalue such as the result ofstd::move or aprvalue such as a nameless temporary(until C++17)), and selects the copy constructor if the argument is anlvalue (named object or a function/operator returning lvalue reference). If only the copy constructor is provided, all argument categories select it (as long as it takes a reference to const, since rvalues can bind to const references), which makes copying the fallback for moving, when moving is unavailable.
#include <iomanip>#include <iostream>#include <string>#include <utility> struct A{std::string s;int k; A(): s("test"), k(-1){} A(const A& o): s(o.s), k(o.k){std::cout<<"move failed!\n";} A(A&& o)noexcept: s(std::move(o.s)),// explicit move of a member of class type k(std::exchange(o.k,0))// explicit move of a member of non-class type{}}; A f(A a){return a;} struct B: A{std::string s2;int n;// implicit move constructor B::(B&&)// calls A's move constructor// calls s2's move constructor// and makes a bitwise copy of n}; struct C: B{ ~C(){}// destructor prevents implicit move constructor C::(C&&)}; struct D: B{ D(){} ~D(){}// destructor would prevent implicit move constructor D::(D&&) D(D&&)=default;// forces a move constructor anyway}; int main(){std::cout<<"Trying to move A\n"; A a1= f(A());// return by value move-constructs the target// from the function parameter std::cout<<"Before move, a1.s = "<<std::quoted(a1.s)<<" a1.k = "<< a1.k<<'\n'; A a2= std::move(a1);// move-constructs from xvaluestd::cout<<"After move, a1.s = "<<std::quoted(a1.s)<<" a1.k = "<< a1.k<<'\n'; std::cout<<"\nTrying to move B\n"; B b1; std::cout<<"Before move, b1.s = "<<std::quoted(b1.s)<<"\n"; B b2= std::move(b1);// calls implicit move constructorstd::cout<<"After move, b1.s = "<<std::quoted(b1.s)<<"\n"; std::cout<<"\nTrying to move C\n"; C c1; C c2= std::move(c1);// calls copy constructor std::cout<<"\nTrying to move D\n"; D d1; D d2= std::move(d1);}
Output:
Trying to move ABefore move, a1.s = "test" a1.k = -1After move, a1.s = "" a1.k = 0 Trying to move BBefore move, b1.s = "test"After move, b1.s = "" Trying to move Cmove failed! Trying to move D
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
CWG 1353 | C++11 | the conditions where defaulted move constructors are defined as deleted did not consider multi-dimensional array types | consider these types |
CWG 1402 | C++11 | a defaulted move constructor that would call a non-trivial copy constructor was defined as deleted; a defaulted move constructor that is deleted still participated in overload resolution | allows call to such copy constructor; made ignored in overload resolution |
CWG 1491 | C++11 | a defaulted move constructor of a class with a non-static data member of rvalue reference type was defined as deleted | not deleted in this case |
CWG 2094 | C++11 | a volatile subobject made a defaulted move constructor non-trivial (CWG issue 496) | triviality not affected |
CWG 2595 | C++20 | a move constructor was not eligible if there is another move constructor which is more constrained but does not satisfy its associated constraints | it can be eligible in this case |