base::Optional<T>
is a container that might contain an instance of T
.
base::Optional is an implementation of std::optional, initially a C++ experimental feature and now part of the C++17 standard. The Chromium's implementation is as close as possible to the specification. The differences are listed at the beginning of the header. The most important difference is that all the objects and types are part of the base::
namespace instead of std::
. Also, following Chromium coding style, the class is named Optional
instead of optional
.
For a deep API description, please have a look at std::optional or the Chromium implementation.
When initialized without a value, base::Optional<T>
will be empty. When empty, the operator bool
will return false
and value()
should not be called. An empty base::Optional<T>
is equal to base::nullopt
.
base::Optional<int> opt; opt == true; // false opt.value(); // illegal, will DCHECK opt == base::nullopt; // true
To pass an empty optional argument to another function, use base::nullopt
where you would otherwise have used a nullptr
:
OtherFunction(42, base::nullopt); // Supply an empty optional argument
To avoid calling value()
when an base::Optional<T>
is empty, instead of doing checks, it is possible to use value_or()
and pass a default value:
base::Optional<int> opt; opt.value_or(42); // will return 42
It is possible to initialize a base::Optional<T>
from its constructor and operator=
using T
or another base::Optional<T>
:
base::Optional<int> opt_1 = 1; // .value() == 1 base::Optional<int> opt_2 = base::Optional<int>(2); // .value() == 2
All basic operators should be available on base::Optional<T>
: it is possible to compare a base::Optional<T>
with another or with a T
or base::nullopt
.
base::Optional<int> opt_1; base::Optional<int> opt_2 = 2; opt_1 == opt_2; // false opt_1 = 1; opt_1 <= opt_2; // true opt_1 == 1; // true opt_1 == base::nullopt; // false
base::Optional<T>
has a helper function base::make_optional<T&&>
:
base::Optional<int> opt = base::make_optional<int>(GetMagicNumber());
Finally, base::Optional<T>
is integrated with std::hash
, using std::hash<T>
if it is not empty, a default value otherwise. .emplace()
and .swap()
can be used as members functions and std::swap()
will work with two base::Optional<T>
objects.
base::Optional<T>
is implemented with a union with a T
member. The object doesn‘t behave like a pointer and doesn’t do dynamic memory allocation. In other words, it is guaranteed to have an object allocated when it is not empty.
A very common use case is for classes and structures that have an object not always available, because it is early initialized or because the underlying data structure doesn't require it.
It is common to implement such patterns with dynamically allocated pointers, nullptr
representing the absence of value. Other approaches involve std::pair<T, bool>
where bool represents whether the object is actually present.
It can also be used for simple types, for example when a structure wants to represent whether the user or the underlying data structure has some value unspecified, a base::Optional<int>
would be easier to understand than a special value representing the lack of it. For example, using -1 as the undefined value when the expected value can't be negative.
It is recommended to not use base::Optional<T>
as a function parameter as it will force the callers to use base::Optional<T>
. Instead, it is recommended to keep using T*
for arguments that can be omitted, with nullptr
representing no value. A helper, base::OptionalOrNullptr
, is available in stl_util.h and can make it easier to convert base::Optional<T>
to T*
.
Furthermore, depending on T
, MSVC might fail to compile code using base::Optional<T>
as a parameter because of memory alignment issues.