One thing I am curious about is why strings are passed by value instead
of by constant reference.
Even granted that many standard library vendors *in the past* used
COW reference counting implementations of std::string to minimize the
cost of copying, this surely is still an unwarranted additional cost.
E.g. libpqxx-1.2.2\src\connection.cxx:427
Instead of:
void pqxx::Connection::BeginCopyRead(string Table)
Should be:
void pqxx::Connection::BeginCopyRead(const string& Table)
{ Result R( Exec(("COPY " + Table + " TO STDOUT").c_str()) ); R.CheckStatus();
}
Of course if you are going to change the string anyway inside the body
of the function, pass by const
reference is misleading for both the compiler and the user, so pass
by value would be justified. E.g. if the above example had been
something like
void pqxx::Connection::BeginCopyRead(string Table)
{ Table = "COPY " + Table + " TO STDOUT"; Result R( Exec(Table.c_str()) ); R.CheckStatus();
}
I have found few of these cases in libpqxx.
Leo Goodstadt
MRC Functional Genetics Unit
OXFORD
OX1 3QX