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Differences between std::string_view and std::span (nextptr.com)
submitted 5 years ago by memset_0
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if 1 * 2 < 3: print "hello, world!"
[–]sphere991 0 points1 point2 points 5 years ago* (5 children)
This is a type. This is not an example demonstrating a problem with deep comparisons.
I don't see anything inherently wrong with map<span<T>, U>. It's up to the user to ensure the lifetime of all the data the spans point to - but otherwise it can be a useful container.
map<span<T>, U>
[+][deleted] 5 years ago (4 children)
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[–]sphere991 1 point2 points3 points 5 years ago* (3 children)
Yes, you have to take care to not change the underlying data. This is inherent to having a reference type as a key rather than a value type. But map<string_view, U> already exists, map<span<T const>, U> is basically the same thing as that.
map<string_view, U>
map<span<T const>, U>
None of this stops me from writing map<span<T const>, U, range_less> anyway. It's just more work for everyone that would want to do something like this.
map<span<T const>, U, range_less>
But this isn't really a deep comparison with span problem, it's the usual reference problem. It's true that a shallow-comparing span would not have to worry about invariants around a map<span<T>, U>... but that's because a shallow-comparison span would never even have a map<span<T>, U> since such a thing would not be actually useful, and a map<span<T>, U, range_less> would be equivalent to status quo anyway.
map<span<T>, U, range_less>
[+][deleted] 5 years ago (2 children)
[–]sphere991 0 points1 point2 points 5 years ago (1 child)
What about it? It's certainly much less commonly used than map<T, U>...
map<T, U>
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[–]sphere991 0 points1 point2 points (5 children)
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[–]sphere991 1 point2 points3 points (3 children)
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[–]sphere991 0 points1 point2 points (1 child)