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Table Of Contents
D Cookbook
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Unique pointers are a restrained type that are used when clear ownership of a resource needs to be established. Here, we'll create a UniqueArray(T) object, which enforces that only one reference to its payload can exist at any time.
In order to use unique pointers, perform the following steps:
Create a struct UniqueArray(T) with a member of type T.
Disable the postblit by using @disable this(this);.
Write a private constructor that takes T.
Write a release method that nullifies the current object and returns UniqueArray with the payload.
Write a destructor to perform cleanup, if necessary.
Offer a method to create a new unique resource.
Implement other methods to use the object. Do not use alias this or any other method that may escape your reference.
To use the method any time, you need to pass the reference somewhere. This can be done by calling release, as shown in the following code snippet:
import core.stdc.stdlib;
struct UniqueArray(T) {
private T[] payload...
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