// Copyright 2011 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved. #ifndef ART_SRC_STL_UTIL_H_ #define ART_SRC_STL_UTIL_H_ namespace art { // STLDeleteContainerPointers() // For a range within a container of pointers, calls delete // (non-array version) on these pointers. // NOTE: for these three functions, we could just implement a DeleteObject // functor and then call for_each() on the range and functor, but this // requires us to pull in all of algorithm.h, which seems expensive. // For hash_[multi]set, it is important that this deletes behind the iterator // because the hash_set may call the hash function on the iterator when it is // advanced, which could result in the hash function trying to deference a // stale pointer. template void STLDeleteContainerPointers(ForwardIterator begin, ForwardIterator end) { while (begin != end) { ForwardIterator temp = begin; ++begin; delete *temp; } } // STLDeleteElements() deletes all the elements in an STL container and clears // the container. This function is suitable for use with a vector, set, // hash_set, or any other STL container which defines sensible begin(), end(), // and clear() methods. // // If container is NULL, this function is a no-op. // // As an alternative to calling STLDeleteElements() directly, consider // ElementDeleter (defined below), which ensures that your container's elements // are deleted when the ElementDeleter goes out of scope. template void STLDeleteElements(T *container) { if (!container) return; STLDeleteContainerPointers(container->begin(), container->end()); container->clear(); } } // namespace art #endif // ART_SRC_STL_UTIL_H_