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  • Book Overview & Buying C++ STL Cookbook
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C++ STL Cookbook

C++ STL Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Bill Weinman
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C++ STL Cookbook

C++ STL Cookbook

By: Bill Weinman

Overview of this book

C++ STL Cookbook is a comprehensive guide that provides practical solutions for mastering the latest features of the C++23 Standard Template Library (STL) through hands-on recipes. Beginning with new features in C++23, this book will help you understand the language's updated mechanics and library features, and offer insights into how they work. Unlike other books, this cookbook takes an implementation-specific, problem-solution approach that will help you overcome hurdles quickly. You'll learn core STL concepts, such as containers, algorithms, utility classes, lambda expressions, iterators, and more, through specific real-world recipes. Building on the success of the first edition, this updated guide includes a new chapter dedicated to the latest features introduced in C++23, such as improved modules, refined ranges, and coroutine-based generators. It also covers essential best practices for writing cleaner and more efficient code, including the use of coroutines, structured bindings, and std::span. Whether you're looking to deepen your understanding of the C++ STL or implement the latest features in your projects, this book provides valuable insights, clear and concise explanations and practical solutions to enhance your C++ programming skills.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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14
Index

Manage allocated memory with std::unique_ptr

Smart pointers are an excellent tool for managing allocated heap memory.

Heap memory is managed at the lowest level by the C functions malloc() and free(). malloc() allocates a block of memory from the heap, and free() returns it to the heap. These functions do not perform initialization and they do not call constructors or destructors. If you fail to return allocated memory to the heap with a call to free(), the behavior is undefined and often leads to memory leaks and security vulnerabilities.

C++ provides the new and delete operators to allocate and free heap memory in place of malloc() and free(). The new and delete operators call object constructors and destructors but still do not manage memory. If you allocate memory with new and fail to free it with delete, you will likely get memory leaks.

Introduced with C++14, smart pointers comply with the RAII idiom, Resource Acquisition Is Initialization. This means that when memory...

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C++ STL Cookbook
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