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Support For C++11/14/17 Features (Modern C++)

 

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This article describes C++11/14/17 features in Visual C++.

C++11Feature List

Visual C++ implements the vast majority of features in the C++11 core language specification, as well as many C++14 Library features and some features proposed for C++17. The following table lists C++11/14/17 core language features and their implementation status in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010, Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012, and Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013, and Visual Studio 2015.

C++11 Core Language Features Table

C++11 Core Language Features Visual Studio 2010 Visual Studio 2012 Visual Studio 2013 Visual Studio 2015
Rvalue references v0.1, v1.0, v2.0, v2.1, v3.0 v2.0 v2.1* v2.1* v3.0
ref-qualifiers No No No Yes
Non-static data member initializers No No Yes Yes
Variadic templates v0.9, v1.0 No No Yes Yes
Initializer lists No No Yes Yes
static_assert Yes Yes Yes Yes
auto v0.9, v1.0 v1.0 v1.0 v1.0 Yes
Trailing return types Yes Yes Yes Yes
Lambdas v0.9, v1.0, v1.1 v1.0 v1.1 v1.1 Yes
decltype v1.0, v1.1 v1.0 v1.1** v1.1 Yes
Right angle brackets Yes Yes Yes Yes
Default template arguments for function templates No No Yes Yes
Expression SFINAE No No No No
Alias templates No No Yes Yes
Extern templates Yes Yes Yes Yes
nullptr Yes Yes Yes Yes
Strongly typed enums Partial Yes Yes Yes
Forward declared enums No Yes Yes Yes
Attributes No No No Yes
constexpr No No No Yes
Alignment TR1 Partial Partial Yes
Delegating constructors No No Yes Yes
Inheriting constructors No No No Yes
Explicit conversion operators No No Yes Yes
char16_t/char32_t No No No Yes
Unicode string literals No No No Yes
Raw string literals No No Yes Yes
Universal character names in literals No No No Yes
User-defined literals No No No Yes
Standard-layout and trivial types No Yes Yes Yes
Defaulted and deleted functions No No Yes* Yes
Extended friend declarations Yes Yes Yes Yes
Extended sizeof No No No Yes
Inline namespaces No No No Yes
Unrestricted unions No No No Yes
Local and unnamed types as template arguments Yes Yes Yes Yes
Range-based for-loop No Yes Yes Yes
override and final v0.8, v0.9, v1.0 Partial Yes Yes Yes
Minimal GC support Yes Yes Yes Yes
noexcept No No No Yes

[In This Article]

C++11 Core Language Features Table: Concurrency

C++11 Core Language Features: Concurrency Visual Studio 2010 Visual Studio 2012 Visual Studio 2013 Visual Studio 2015
Reworded sequence points N/A N/A N/A Yes
Atomics No Yes Yes Yes
Strong compare and exchange No Yes Yes Yes
Bidirectional fences No Yes Yes Yes
Memory model N/A N/A N/A Yes
Data-dependency ordering No Yes Yes Yes
Data-dependency ordering: function annotation No No No Yes
exception_ptr Yes Yes Yes Yes
quick_exit No No No Yes
Atomics in signal handlers No Yes Yes Yes
Thread-local storage Partial Partial Partial Yes
Magic statics No No No Yes

[In This Article]

C++11 Core Language Features: C99

C++11 Core Language Features: C99 Visual Studio 2010 Visual Studio 2012 Visual Studio 2013 Visual Studio 2015
__func__ Partial Partial Partial Yes
C99 preprocessor Partial Partial Partial Partial
long long Yes Yes Yes Yes
Extended integer types N/A N/A N/A N/A

[In This Article]

C++ 14 Core Language Features

Feature Visual Studio 2013 Visual Studio 2015
Tweaked wording for contextual conversions Yes Yes
Binary literals No Yes
auto and decltype(auto) return types No Yes
init-captures No Yes
Generic lambdas No Yes
Variable templates No No
Extended constexpr No No
NSDMIs for aggregates No No
Avoiding/fusing allocations No No
[[deprecated]] attributes No No
Sized allocation No Yes
Digit separators No Yes

C++17 Proposed Core Language Features

Feature Visual Studio 2013 Visual Studio 2015
New rules for auto with braced-init-lists No No
Terse static assert No No
typename in template template-parameters No No
Removing trigraphs Yes Yes
Nested namespace definitions No No
N4259 std::uncaught_exceptions() No No
N4261 Fixing qualification conversions No No
N4266 Attributes for namespaces and enumerators No No
N4267 u8 character literals No No
N4268 Allowing more non-type template args No No
N4295 Fold expressions No No
await/resume No Yes

Guide to the Feature Tables

Rvalue References

Note

The version designations (v0.1, v1.0, v2.0, v2.1, v3.0) in the following descriptions are invented just to show the evolution of C++11. The standard itself does not use them.

N1610 "Clarification of Initialization of Class Objects by rvalues" was an early attempt to enable move semantics without rvalue references. For the sake of this discussion, let’s call it "rvalue references v0.1". It was superseded by "rvalue references v1.0." "Rvalue references v2.0", which is what the work in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010 was based on, prohibits rvalue references from binding to lvalues and thereby fixes a major safety problem. "Rvalue references v2.1" refines this rule. Consider vector<string>::push_back(), which has the overloads push_back(const string&) and push_back(string&&), and the call v.push_back("strval"). The expression "strval" is a string literal, and is an lvalue. (Other literals—for example, the integer 1729—are rvalues, but string literals are special because they are arrays.) The "rvalue references v2.0" rules said that string&& cannot bind to "strval" because "strval" is an lvalue and therefore, push_back(const string&) is the only viable overload. This would create a temporary std::string, copy it into the vector, and then destroy the temporary std::string, which wasn’t very efficient. The "rvalue references v2.1" rules recognize that binding string&& to "strval" would create a temporary std::string, and that temporary is an rvalue. Therefore, both push_back(const string&) and push_back(string&&) are viable, and push_back(string&&) is preferred. A temporary std::string is constructed, and then moved into the vector. This is more efficient.

"Rvalue references v3.0" adds new rules to automatically generate move constructors and move assignment operators under certain conditions. This is implemented in Visual Studio 2015.

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Lambdas

After lambda functions were voted into the Working Paper (version "0.9") and mutable lambdas were added (version "1.0"), the Standardization Committee overhauled the wording. This produced lambdas version "1.1", which is now fully supported. The lambdas v1.1 wording clarifies what should occur in corner cases like referring to static members or nested lambdas. This fixes problems that are triggered by complex lambdas. Additionally, stateless lambdas are now convertible to function pointers. This is not in the N2927 wording, but it is counted as part of lambdas v1.1 anyway. C++115.1.2 [expr.prim.lambda]/6 has this description: "The closure type for a lambda-expression with no lambda-capture has a public non-virtual non-explicit const conversion function to pointer to function having the same parameter and return types as the closure type’s function call operator. The value returned by this conversion function shall be the address of a function that, when invoked, has the same effect as invoking the closure type’s function call operator." (The Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 implementation is even better than that, because it makes stateless lambdas convertible to function pointers that have arbitrary calling conventions. This is important when you are using APIs that expect things like __stdcall function pointers.)

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decltype

After decltype was voted into the Working Paper (version 1.0), it received a small but important fix at the last minute (version 1.1). This is of great interest to programmers who work on the STL and Boost.

[In This Article]

Strongly Typed/Forward Declared enums

Strongly typed enums were partially supported in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010 (specifically, the part about explicitly specified underlying types). These are now fully implemented in Visual Studio, and the C++11 semantics for forward declared enums are also fully implemented.

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Alignment

The Core Language keywords alignas/alignof from the alignment proposal that was voted into the Working Paper are implemented in Visual Studio 2015. Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010 had aligned_storage from TR1. Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 added aligned_union and std::align() to the Standard Library and significant issues were fixed in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013.

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Standard-Layout and Trivial Types

The exposed changes from N2342 "POD's Revisited; Resolving Core Issue 568 (Revision 5)" are the additions of is_trivial and is_standard_layout to the Standard Template Library's <type_traits>. (N2342 reworked a lot of the Core Language wording, but no compiler changes were required.) These type traits were available in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010, but they just duplicated is_pod. Therefore, the table earlier in this document said "No" support. They are now powered by compiler hooks that are designed to give accurate answers.

The STL's common_type<> received a much-needed fix in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013. The C++11 specification for common_type<> had unexpected and undesired consequences; in particular, it makes common_type<int, int>::type return int&&. Therefore, Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013 implements the Proposed Resolution for Library Working Group issue 2141, which makes common_type<int, int>::type return int.

As a side-effect of this change, the identity case no longer works (common_type<T> does not always result in type T). This complies with the Proposed Resolution, but it breaks any code that relied on the previous behavior.

If you require an identity type trait, don't use the non-standard std::identity that's defined in <type_traits> because it won't work for <void>. Instead, implement your own identity type trait to suit your needs. Here's an example:

template <typename T> struct Identity {  
    typedef T type;  
};  
  

Note

For other breaking changes, see Visual C++ change history 2003 - 2015.

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Defaulted and Deleted Functions

These are now supported, but with this exception: For defaulted functions, the use of =default to request member-wise move constructors and move assignment operators is not supported. The copies and moves don't interact precisely like the Standard says they should—for example, deletion of moves is specified to also suppress copies, but Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013 does not.

For information about how to use defaulted and deleted functions, see Functions.

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override and final

This went through a short but complicated evolution. Originally, in version 0.8, there were [[override]], [[hiding]], and [[base_check]] attributes. Then in version 0.9, the attributes were eliminated and replaced with contextual keywords. Finally, in version 1.0, they were reduced to "final" on classes, and "override" and "final" on functions. This makes it an Ascended Extension because Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010 already supported this "override" syntax on functions, and had semantics reasonably close to those in C++11. "final" was also supported, but under the different spelling "sealed". The Standard spelling and semantics of "override" and "final" are now completely supported. For more information, see override Specifier and final Specifier.

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Atomics, and More

Atomics, strong compare and exchange, bidirectional fences, and data-dependency ordering specify Standard Library machinery, which are now implemented.

Related STL headers: <atomic>, <chrono>, <condition_variable>, <future>, <mutex>, <ratio>, <scoped_allocator>, and <thread>.

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C99 __func__ and Preprocessor Rules

The table C++11 Core Language Features: C99 lists "Partial" implementation for two items. For the pre-defined identifier __func__, "Partial" is listed because support is provided for the non-Standard extensions __FUNCDNAME__, __FUNCSIG__, and __FUNCTION__. For more information, see Predefined Macros. For C99 preprocessor rules, "Partial" is listed because variadic macros are supported. For more information, see Variadic Macros.

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Standard Library Features

That covers the Core Language. As for the C++11 Standard Library, we don't have a pretty comparison table of features, but Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 implemented it, with two exceptions. First, when a library feature depended on functionality that was missing in the compiler, it was either simulated—for example, simulated variadic templates for make_shared<T>()—or it wasn't implemented. (There were only a few cases—most notably, <initializer_list>—which were fully implemented in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013.) With very few exceptions, C99 was implemented in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013 and C++ wrapper headers provided. For more information, see C99 library support in Visual Studio 2013.

Here's a partial list of the changes in Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 and Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013:

Emplacement: As required by C++11, emplace()/emplace_front()/emplace_back()/emplace_hint()/emplace_after() are implemented in all containers for "arbitrary" numbers of arguments (see the "Simulated variadics" section). For example, vector<T> has "template <typename... Args> void emplace_back(Args&&... args)", which directly constructs an element of type T at the back of the vector from an arbitrary number of arbitrary arguments, perfectly forwarded. This can be more efficient than push_back(T&&), which would involve an extra move construction and destruction.

Variadics: Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 had a scheme for simulating variadic templates. In Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013, the simulations are gone and variadics are fully implemented. If your code relies on the old simulated variadics behavior, you have to fix it. However, the switch to real variadic templates has improved compile times and reduced compiler memory consumption.

Explicit conversion operators: In the Core Language, explicit conversion operators are a general feature—for example, you can have explicit operator MyClass(). However, the Standard Library currently uses only one form: explicit operator bool(), which makes classes safely Boolean-testable. (Plain "operator bool()" is notoriously dangerous.) Previously, Visual C++ simulated explicit operator bool() with operator pointer-to-member(), which led to various headaches and slight inefficiencies. Now, this "fake bool" workaround is completely removed.

Randomness: uniform_int_distribution is now perfectly unbiased, and shuffle() is implemented in <algorithm>, which directly accepts Uniform Random Number Generators like mersenne_twister.

Resistance to overloaded address-of operators: C++98/03 prohibited an element of an STL container from overloading its address-of operator. This is what classes like CComPtr do, so that helper classes like CAdapt were required to shield the STL from such overloads. During the development of Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010, STL changes made it reject overloaded address-of operators in even more situations. C++11 changed the requirements to make overloaded address-of operators acceptable. C++11, and Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010, provide the helper function std::addressof(), which can get the true address of an object regardless of operator overloading. Before Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010 was released, we attempted to replace occurrences of "&elem" with "std::addressof(elem)", which is appropriately resistant. Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 went further, so that classes that overload their address-of operator should be usable throughout the STL.

Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 went beyond C++11 in several ways:

SCARY iterators: As permitted but not required by the C++11 Standard, SCARY iterators have been implemented, as described by N2911 "Minimizing Dependencies within Generic Classes for Faster and Smaller Programs" and N2980 "SCARY Iterator Assignment and Initialization, Revision 1".

Filesystem: The <filesystem> header from the TR2 proposal has been added. It offers recursive_directory_iterator and other interesting features. Before work on TR2 was frozen because C++0x was running very late and was changing to C++11, the 2006 proposal was derived from Boost.Filesystem V2. It later evolved into Boost.Filesystem V3, which is implemented in Visual Studio 2015.

And a major optimization! All of our containers are now optimally small given their current representations. This refers to the container objects themselves, not to their pointed-to contents. For example, std::vector contains three raw pointers. In Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2010, x86 release mode, std::vector was 16 bytes. In Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012, it is 12 bytes, which is optimally small. This is a big deal—if you have 100,000 vectors in your program, Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2012 saves you 400,000 bytes. Decreased memory usage saves both space and time.

This was achieved by avoiding the storage of empty allocators and comparators, because std::allocator and std::less are stateless. (These optimizations are enabled for custom allocators/comparators too, as long as they are stateless. Obviously, storage of stateful allocators/comparators cannot be avoided, but those are very rare.)

Visual C++ in Visual Studio 2013 implemented some key C++14 library features:

  • "Transparent operator functors" less<>, greater<>, plus<>, multiplies<>, and so on.

  • make_unique<T>(args...) and make_unique<T[]>(n)

  • cbegin()/cend(), rbegin()/rend(), and crbegin()/crend() non-member functions.

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See Also

Welcome Back to C++
C++ Language Reference
Lambda Expressions
Range-based for Statement (C++)
C++ Standard Library
Visual C++ Team Blog
What's New for Visual C++
Visual C++ change history 2003 - 2015