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    | std::map::emplace(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::map::emplace(3) | 
NAME¶
std::map::emplace - std::map::emplace
Synopsis¶
 template< class... Args > (since C++11)
  
   std::pair<iterator, bool> emplace( Args&&... args );
  
   Inserts a new element into the container constructed in-place with the given
    args,
  
   if there is no element with the key in the container.
  
   The constructor of the new element (i.e. std::pair<const Key, T>) is
    called with
  
   exactly the same arguments as supplied to emplace, forwarded via
  
   std::forward<Args>(args).... The element may be constructed even if
    there already is
  
   an element with the key in the container, in which case the newly constructed
  
   element will be destroyed immediately.
  
   Careful use of emplace allows the new element to be constructed while
    avoiding
  
   unnecessary copy or move operations.
  
   No iterators or references are invalidated.
Parameters¶
args - arguments to forward to the constructor of the element
Return value¶
 A pair consisting of an iterator to the inserted element (or to
    the element that
  
   prevented the insertion) and a bool value set to true if and only if the
    insertion
  
   took place.
Exceptions¶
 If an exception is thrown for any reason, this function has no
    effect (strong
  
   exception safety guarantee).
Complexity¶
Logarithmic in the size of the container.
Example¶
// Run this code
  
   #include <iostream>
  
   #include <string>
  
   #include <utility>
  
   #include <map>
  
   int main()
  
   {
  
   std::map<std::string, std::string> m;
  
   // uses pair's move constructor
  
   m.emplace(std::make_pair(std::string("a"),
    std::string("a")));
  
   // uses pair's converting move constructor
  
   m.emplace(std::make_pair("b", "abcd"));
  
   // uses pair's template constructor
  
   m.emplace("d", "ddd");
  
   // emplace with duplicate key has no effect
  
   m.emplace("d", "DDD");
  
   // uses pair's piecewise constructor
  
   m.emplace(std::piecewise_construct,
  
   std::forward_as_tuple("c"),
  
   std::forward_as_tuple(10, 'c'));
  
   // an alternative is: m.try_emplace("c", 10, 'c');
  
   for (const auto& p : m)
  
   std::cout << p.first << " => " << p.second
    << '\n';
  
   }
Output:¶
 a => a
  
   b => abcd
  
   c => cccccccccc
  
   d => ddd
See also¶
 emplace_hint constructs elements in-place using a hint
  
   (C++11) (public member function)
  
   try_emplace inserts in-place if the key does not exist, does nothing if the
    key
  
   (C++17) exists
  
   (public member function)
  
   inserts elements
  
   insert or nodes
  
   (since C++17)
  
   (public member function)
| 2024.06.10 | http://cppreference.com |