Design Rationale
There was an important design tradeoff regarding the
constructors: We could implement array as an "aggregate" (see
Section 8.5.1, [dcl.init.aggr], of the C++ Standard). This would
mean:
An array can be initialized with a
brace-enclosing, comma-separated list of initializers for the
elements of the container, written in increasing subscript
order:
boost::array<int,4> a = { { 1, 2, 3 } };
Note that if there are fewer elements in the
initializer list, then each remaining element gets
default-initialized (thus, it has a defined value).
However, this approach has its drawbacks:
passing no initializer list means that the elements
have an indetermined initial value
, because the rule says
that aggregates may have:
No user-declared constructors.
No private or protected non-static data members.
No base classes.
No virtual functions.
Nevertheless, The current implementation uses this approach.
Note that for standard conforming compilers it is possible to
use fewer braces (according to 8.5.1 (11) of the Standard). That is,
you can initialize an array as follows:
boost::array<int,4> a = { 1, 2, 3 };
I'd appreciate any constructive feedback.
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