How string accepting interface should look like?
- by ybungalobill
Hello,
This is a follow up of this question. Suppose I write a C++ interface that accepts or returns a const string. I can use a const char* zero-terminated string:
void f(const char* str); // (1)
The other way would be to use an std::string:
void f(const string& str); // (2)
It's also possible to write an overload and accept both:
void f(const char* str); // (3)
void f(const string& str);
Or even a template in conjunction with boost string algorithms:
template<class Range> void f(const Range& str); // (4)
My thoughts are:
(1) is not C++ish and may be less efficient when subsequent operations may need to know the string length.
(2) is bad because now f("long very long C string"); invokes a construction of std::string which involves a heap allocation. If f uses that string just to pass it to some low-level interface that expects a C-string (like fopen) then it is just a waste of resources.
(3) causes code duplication. Although one f can call the other depending on what is the most efficient implementation. However we can't overload based on return type, like in case of std::exception::what() that returns a const char*.
(4) doesn't work with separate compilation and may cause even larger code bloat.
Choosing between (1) and (2) based on what's needed by the implementation is, well, leaking an implementation detail to the interface.
The question is: what is the preffered way? Is there any single guideline I can follow? What's your experience?