//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // // Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions. // See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information. // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // REQUIRES: c++11 || c++14 || c++17 || c++20 // This test makes sure that we don't apply P1951 before C++23, since that is // a breaking change. The examples in this test are taken from Richard Smith's // comments on https://llvm.org/D109066. #include #include #include struct A { int *p_; A(int *p) : p_(p) { *p_ += 1; } A(const A& a) : p_(a.p_) { *p_ += 1; } ~A() { *p_ -= 1; } }; int main(int, char**) { // Example 1: // Without P1951, we call the `pair(int, const A&)` constructor (the converting constructor is not usable because // we can't deduce from an initializer list), which creates the A temporary as part of the call to f. With P1951, // we call the `pair(U&&, V&&)` constructor, which creates a A temporary inside the pair constructor, and that // temporary doesn't live long enough any more. { int i = 0; auto f = [&](std::pair, const A&>) { assert(i >= 1); }; f({{42, 43}, &i}); } // Example 2: // Here, n doesn't need to be captured if we call the `pair(const int&, const long&)` constructor, because // the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion happens in the lambda. But if we call the `pair(U&&, V&&)` constructor // (deducing V = int), then n does need to be captured. { const int n = 5; (void) []{ std::pair({1}, n); }; } return 0; }