Compartir a través de


/Zc:rvalueCast (Enforce type conversion rules)

When the /Zc:rvalueCast option is specified, the compiler correctly identifies an rvalue reference type as the result of a cast operation in accordance with the C++11 standard. When the option is not specified, the compiler behavior is the same as in Visual Studio 2012. By default, /Zc:rvalueCast is off. For conformance and to eliminate errors in the use of casts, we recommend that you use /Zc:rvalueCast.

/Zc:rvalueCast[-]

Remarks

If /Zc:rvalueCast is specified, the compiler follows section 5.4 of the C++11 standard and treats only cast expressions that result in non-reference types and cast expressions that result in rvalue references to non-function types as rvalue types. By default, or if /Zc:rvalueCast- is specified, the compiler is non-conformant and treats all cast expressions that result in rvalue references as rvalues.

Use /Zc:rvalueCast if you pass a cast expression as an argument to a function that takes an rvalue reference type. The default behavior causes compiler error C2664 when the compiler incorrectly determines the type of the cast expression. This example shows a compiler error in correct code when /Zc:rvalueCast is not specified:

// Test of /Zc:rvalueCast
// compile by using:
// cl /c /Zc:rvalueCast- make_thing.cpp
// cl /c /Zc:rvalueCast make_thing.cpp

#include <utility>

template <typename T> 
struct Thing {
   // Construct a Thing by using two rvalue reference parameters
   Thing(T&& t1, T&& t2)
      : thing1(t1), thing2(t2) {}

   T& thing1;
   T& thing2;
};

// Create a Thing, using move semantics if possible
template <typename T>
Thing<T> make_thing(T&& t1, T&& t2)
{
   return (Thing<T>(std::forward<T>(t1), std::forward<T>(t2)));
}

struct Test1 {
   long a;
   long b;

   Thing<long> test() { 
      // Use identity casts to create rvalues as arguments
      return make_thing(static_cast<long>(a), static_cast<long>(b)); 
   }
};

The default compiler behavior may not report error C2102 when appropriate. In this example, the compiler does not report an error if the address of an rvalue created by an identity cast is taken when /Zc:rvalueCast is not specified:

int main() {
   int a = 1;
   int *p = &a;   // Okay, take address of lvalue 
                  // Identity cast creates rvalue from lvalue;  
   p = &(int)a;   // problem: should cause C2102: '&' requires l-value
}

For more information about conformance issues in Visual C++, see Nonstandard Behavior.

To set this compiler option in the Visual Studio development environment

  1. Open the project's Property Pages dialog box. For details, see Working with Project Properties.

  2. Select the C/C++ folder.

  3. Select the Command Line property page.

  4. Modify the Additional Options property to include /Zc:rvalueCast and then choose OK.

See Also

Reference

/Zc (Conformance)