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-rw-r--r--src/span.h56
1 files changed, 56 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/span.h b/src/span.h
index 4931507719..841f1eadf7 100644
--- a/src/span.h
+++ b/src/span.h
@@ -21,6 +21,62 @@
/** A Span is an object that can refer to a contiguous sequence of objects.
*
* It implements a subset of C++20's std::span.
+ *
+ * Things to be aware of when writing code that deals with Spans:
+ *
+ * - Similar to references themselves, Spans are subject to reference lifetime
+ * issues. The user is responsible for making sure the objects pointed to by
+ * a Span live as long as the Span is used. For example:
+ *
+ * std::vector<int> vec{1,2,3,4};
+ * Span<int> sp(vec);
+ * vec.push_back(5);
+ * printf("%i\n", sp.front()); // UB!
+ *
+ * may exhibit undefined behavior, as increasing the size of a vector may
+ * invalidate references.
+ *
+ * - One particular pitfall is that Spans can be constructed from temporaries,
+ * but this is unsafe when the Span is stored in a variable, outliving the
+ * temporary. For example, this will compile, but exhibits undefined behavior:
+ *
+ * Span<const int> sp(std::vector<int>{1, 2, 3});
+ * printf("%i\n", sp.front()); // UB!
+ *
+ * The lifetime of the vector ends when the statement it is created in ends.
+ * Thus the Span is left with a dangling reference, and using it is undefined.
+ *
+ * - Due to Span's automatic creation from range-like objects (arrays, and data
+ * types that expose a data() and size() member function), functions that
+ * accept a Span as input parameter can be called with any compatible
+ * range-like object. For example, this works:
+*
+ * void Foo(Span<const int> arg);
+ *
+ * Foo(std::vector<int>{1, 2, 3}); // Works
+ *
+ * This is very useful in cases where a function truly does not care about the
+ * container, and only about having exactly a range of elements. However it
+ * may also be surprising to see automatic conversions in this case.
+ *
+ * When a function accepts a Span with a mutable element type, it will not
+ * accept temporaries; only variables or other references. For example:
+ *
+ * void FooMut(Span<int> arg);
+ *
+ * FooMut(std::vector<int>{1, 2, 3}); // Does not compile
+ * std::vector<int> baz{1, 2, 3};
+ * FooMut(baz); // Works
+ *
+ * This is similar to how functions that take (non-const) lvalue references
+ * as input cannot accept temporaries. This does not work either:
+ *
+ * void FooVec(std::vector<int>& arg);
+ * FooVec(std::vector<int>{1, 2, 3}); // Does not compile
+ *
+ * The idea is that if a function accepts a mutable reference, a meaningful
+ * result will be present in that variable after the call. Passing a temporary
+ * is useless in that context.
*/
template<typename C>
class Span