I'm asking about the <thread>
library in C++11 standard.
Say you have a function like:
void func1(int a, int b, ObjA c, ObjB d){
//blahblah implementation
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[]){
std::thread(func1, /*what do do here??*/);
}
How do you pass in all of those arguments into the std::thread
? I tried listing the arguments like:
std::thread(func1, a,b,c,d);
But it complains that there's no such constructor. One way to get around this is defining a struct to package the arguments, but is there another way to do this?
You literally just pass them in std::thread(func1,a,b,c,d);
that should have compiled if the objects existed, but it is wrong for another reason. Since there is no object created you cannot join or detach the thread and the program will not work correctly. Since it is a temporary the destructor is immediately called, since the thread is not joined or detached yet std::terminate
is called. You could std::join
or std::detach
it before the temp is destroyed, like std::thread(func1,a,b,c,d).join();//or detach
.
This is how it should be done.
std::thread t(func1,a,b,c,d);
t.join();
You could also detach the thread, read-up on threads if you don't know the difference between joining and detaching.