std::thread::thread
std::thread::thread
thread( | (1) | (since C++11) |
---|---|---|
thread( thread&& other | (2) | (since C++11) |
template< class Function, class... Args > explicit thread( Function&& f, Args&&... args | (3) | (since C++11) |
thread(const thread&) = delete; | (4) | (since C++11) |
Constructs new thread object.
1) Creates new thread object which does not represent a thread.
2) Move constructor. Constructs the thread object to represent the thread of execution that was represented by other
. After this call other
no longer represents a thread of execution.
3) Creates new std::thread
object and associates it with a thread of execution. The new thread of execution starts executing
std::invoke(decay_copy(std::forward<Function>(f)), decay_copy(std::forward<Args>(args))...
where decay_copy
is defined as.
template <class T>
std::decay_t<T> decay_copy(T&& v) { return std::forward<T>(v }
Except that the calls to decay_copy
are evaluated in the context of the caller, so that any exceptions thrown during evaluation and copying/moving of the arguments are thrown in the current thread, without starting the new thread.
The completion of
the invocation of
the constructor synchronizes-with
(as def
ined in std::memory_order
) the beginning of
the invocation of
the copy of
f
on the new thread of
execution.
This constructor does not participate in overload resolution if std::decay_t | (since C++14) |
---|
4) The copy constructor is deleted; threads are not copyable. No two std::thread
objects may represent the same thread of execution.
Parameters
other | - | another thread object to construct this thread object with |
---|---|---|
f | - | Callable object to execute in the new thread |
args... | - | arguments to pass to the new function |
Postconditions
1) get_id()
equal to std::thread::id()
(i.e. joinable
is false
)
2) other.get_id()
equal to std::thread::id()
and get_id()
returns the value of other.get_id()
prior to the start of construction
3) get_id()
not equal to std::thread::id()
(i.e. joinable
is true
)
Exceptions
1-2)
noexcept
specification:
noexcept
3) std::system_error
if the thread could not be started. The exception may represent the error condition std::errc::resource_unavailable_try_again
or another implementation-specific error condition.
Notes
The arguments to the thread function are moved or copied by value. If a reference argument needs to be passed to the thread function, it has to be wrapped (e.g. with std::ref
or std::cref
).
Any return value from the function is ignored. If the function throws an exception, std::terminate
is called. In order to pass return values or exceptions back to the calling thread, std::promise
or std::async
may be used.
Example
#include <iostream>
#include <utility>
#include <thread>
#include <chrono>
#include <functional>
#include <atomic>
void f1(int n)
{
for (int i = 0; i < 5; ++i) {
std::cout << "Thread 1 executing\n";
++n;
std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10)
}
}
void f2(int& n)
{
for (int i = 0; i < 5; ++i) {
std::cout << "Thread 2 executing\n";
++n;
std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::milliseconds(10)
}
}
int main()
{
int n = 0;
std::thread t1; // t1 is not a thread
std::thread t2(f1, n + 1 // pass by value
std::thread t3(f2, std::ref(n) // pass by reference
std::thread t4(std::move(t3) // t4 is now running f2(). t3 is no longer a thread
t2.join(
t4.join(
std::cout << "Final value of n is " << n << '\n';
}
Possible output:
Thread 1 executing
Thread 2 executing
Thread 1 executing
Thread 2 executing
Thread 1 executing
Thread 2 executing
Thread 1 executing
Thread 2 executing
Thread 2 executing
Thread 1 executing
Final value of n is 5
References
- C++11 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2011):
See also
| C documentation for thrd_create |
|:----|
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