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学ぶ Lvalues vs Rvalues | Introduction to Move Semantics
C++ Move Semantics

bookLvalues vs Rvalues

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In C++, every expression is either an lvalue or an rvalue. Understanding the distinction is crucial for mastering move semantics. The way C++ treats these categories of expressions determines how resources are managed, especially when optimizing for performance and memory usage.

Lvalues
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An lvalue (locator value) refers to an object that occupies some identifiable location in memory (i.e., it has an address). Variables and dereferenced pointers are lvalues.

Rvalues
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An rvalue (read value) is a temporary object or value that does not have a persistent memory address. Literals and the result of most expressions are rvalues.

main.cpp

main.cpp

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#include <iostream> int getValue() { return 42; } int main() { int x = 10; // x is an lvalue int y = x; // x is an lvalue, y is an lvalue int* p = &x; // &x is an lvalue expression (address of x) int z = getValue(); // getValue() returns an rvalue // lvalues can appear on the left of assignment x = 20; // OK: x is an lvalue // rvalues cannot appear on the left of assignment // 10 = x; // Error: 10 is an rvalue // Demonstrate with std::cout std::cout << "x: " << x << std::endl; std::cout << "z: " << z << std::endl; // Temporary object (rvalue) std::cout << "getValue(): " << getValue() << std::endl; }

In the code above, observe how variables are lvalues (they can appear on the left side of an assignment), while temporary results and literals are rvalues (they cannot be assigned to).

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Which of the following statements about lvalues and rvalues is true?

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