diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'absl/container/inlined_vector.h')
-rw-r--r-- | absl/container/inlined_vector.h | 41 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/absl/container/inlined_vector.h b/absl/container/inlined_vector.h index ea8cb02baa61..642dae6cb907 100644 --- a/absl/container/inlined_vector.h +++ b/absl/container/inlined_vector.h @@ -20,17 +20,17 @@ // vector" which behaves in an equivalent fashion to a `std::vector`, except // that storage for small sequences of the vector are provided inline without // requiring any heap allocation. - -// An `absl::InlinedVector<T,N>` specifies the size N at which to inline as one -// of its template parameters. Vectors of length <= N are provided inline. -// Typically N is very small (e.g., 4) so that sequences that are expected to be -// short do not require allocations. - -// An `absl::InlinedVector` does not usually require a specific allocator; if +// +// An `absl::InlinedVector<T, N>` specifies the default capacity `N` as one of +// its template parameters. Instances where `size() <= N` hold contained +// elements in inline space. Typically `N` is very small so that sequences that +// are expected to be short do not require allocations. +// +// An `absl::InlinedVector` does not usually require a specific allocator. If // the inlined vector grows beyond its initial constraints, it will need to -// allocate (as any normal `std::vector` would) and it will generally use the -// default allocator in that case; optionally, a custom allocator may be -// specified using an `absl::InlinedVector<T,N,A>` construction. +// allocate (as any normal `std::vector` would). This is usually performed with +// the default allocator (defined as `std::allocator<T>`). Optionally, a custom +// allocator type may be specified as `A` in `absl::InlinedVector<T, N, A>`. #ifndef ABSL_CONTAINER_INLINED_VECTOR_H_ #define ABSL_CONTAINER_INLINED_VECTOR_H_ @@ -61,8 +61,8 @@ namespace absl { // An `absl::InlinedVector` is designed to be a drop-in replacement for // `std::vector` for use cases where the vector's size is sufficiently small // that it can be inlined. If the inlined vector does grow beyond its estimated -// size, it will trigger an initial allocation on the heap, and will behave as a -// `std:vector`. The API of the `absl::InlinedVector` within this file is +// capacity, it will trigger an initial allocation on the heap, and will behave +// as a `std:vector`. The API of the `absl::InlinedVector` within this file is // designed to cover the same API footprint as covered by `std::vector`. template <typename T, size_t N, typename A = std::allocator<T>> class InlinedVector { @@ -101,7 +101,6 @@ class InlinedVector { using reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<iterator>; using const_reverse_iterator = std::reverse_iterator<const_iterator>; - // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // InlinedVector Constructors and Destructor // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- @@ -135,11 +134,12 @@ class InlinedVector { AppendRange(init_list.begin(), init_list.end()); } - // Creates and initialize with the elements [`first`, `last`). + // Creates an inlined vector with elements constructed from the provided + // Iterator range [`first`, `last`). // // NOTE: The `enable_if` prevents ambiguous interpretation between a call to - // this constructor with two integral arguments and a call to the preceding - // `InlinedVector(n, v)` constructor. + // this constructor with two integral arguments and a call to the above + // `InlinedVector(size_type, const_reference)` constructor. template <typename InputIterator, DisableIfIntegral<InputIterator>* = nullptr> InlinedVector(InputIterator first, InputIterator last, const allocator_type& alloc = allocator_type()) @@ -153,11 +153,11 @@ class InlinedVector { // Creates a copy of `other` but with a specified allocator. InlinedVector(const InlinedVector& other, const allocator_type& alloc); - // Creates an inlined vector with the contents of `other`. + // Creates an inlined vector by moving in the contents of `other`. // // NOTE: This move constructor does not allocate and only moves the underlying // objects, so its `noexcept` specification depends on whether moving the - // underlying objects can throw or not. We assume + // underlying objects can throw or not. We assume: // a) move constructors should only throw due to allocation failure and // b) if `value_type`'s move constructor allocates, it uses the same // allocation function as the `InlinedVector`'s allocator, so the move @@ -167,9 +167,9 @@ class InlinedVector { absl::allocator_is_nothrow<allocator_type>::value || std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<value_type>::value); - // Creates an inlined vector with the contents of `other`. + // Creates an inlined vector by moving in the contents of `other`. // - // NOTE: This move constructor allocates and also moves the underlying + // NOTE: This move constructor allocates and subsequently moves the underlying // objects, so its `noexcept` specification depends on whether the allocation // can throw and whether moving the underlying objects can throw. Based on the // same assumptions as above, the `noexcept` specification is dominated by @@ -180,7 +180,6 @@ class InlinedVector { ~InlinedVector() { clear(); } - // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- // InlinedVector Member Accessors // --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |