Reputation: 21513
i need a std::string of size
bytes, after constructing it i am going to write to every byte in that string prior to reading from it, thus null-initializing the string is a waste of cpu, this works:
std::string s(size,0);
but it's just slightly wasteful, it's basically like using calloc()
when all i need is malloc()
, so the question is, how do i construct a string of X uninitialized bytes?
(using reserve()+push is not an option because im giving the string to a C-api taking char*,size
to do the actual initialization)
edit: this thread seems to about the same issue/related (but with vectors instead of strings): Value-Initialized Objects in C++11 and std::vector constructor
Upvotes: 7
Views: 988
Reputation: 10315
You can't do it with std::string
. But it can be achieved different way, like using std::unique_ptr<char[]>
.
auto pseudo_string = std::unique_ptr<char[]>(new char[size]);
Or if your compiler supports C++20
auto pseudo_string = std::make_unique_for_overwrite<char[]>(size);
Upvotes: 5