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C++ High Performance

You're reading from   C++ High Performance Master the art of optimizing the functioning of your C++ code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839216541
Length 544 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Viktor Sehr Viktor Sehr
Author Profile Icon Viktor Sehr
Viktor Sehr
Björn Andrist Björn Andrist
Author Profile Icon Björn Andrist
Björn Andrist
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Brief Introduction to C++ 2. Essential C++ Techniques FREE CHAPTER 3. Analyzing and Measuring Performance 4. Data Structures 5. Algorithms 6. Ranges and Views 7. Memory Management 8. Compile-Time Programming 9. Essential Utilities 10. Proxy Objects and Lazy Evaluation 11. Concurrency 12. Coroutines and Lazy Generators 13. Asynchronous Programming with Coroutines 14. Parallel Algorithms 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Using views

In this section, we will discuss some relatively new class templates in the C++ standard library: std::string_view from C++17 and std::span, which was introduced in C++20.

These class templates are not containers but lightweight views (or slices) of a sequence of contiguous elements. Views are small objects that are meant to be copied by value. They don't allocate memory, nor do they provide any guarantees regarding the lifetime of the memory they point to. In other words, they are non-owning reference types, which differ significantly from the containers described previously in this chapter. At the same time, they are closely related to std::string, std::array, and std::vector, which we will look at soon. I will start by describing std::string_view.

Avoiding copies with string_view

A std::string_view contains a pointer to the beginning of an immutable string buffer and a size. Since a string is a contiguous sequence of characters, the pointer and the...

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