Hi Stefan,
In that case, wouldn't (shouldn't) it be possible to request a
re-review of libraries alreayd accepted, provided there is good
reason? In other words, as standards evolve, is there a mechanism by
which libraries no longer up to par can be removed from
boost/deprecated/marked as no longer officially endorsed, something
like that (I can see that simply removing them would make people
depending on them very unhappy).
Best,
Dee
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 2:16 AM, Stefan Strasser
Am Monday 02 November 2009 15:15:00 schrieb Hansjoerg:
Hello,
In my application I have a lot of small objects. For that I thought that it is the best to use an object pool..I have read the docu of object_pool...but I don't understand really how I have to use it..
I'd consider using another library, or allocate your objects in bulk yourself and, e.g. store the unused objects in a boost::intrusive::slist until they're needed. boost::object_pool has some major problems, e.g. linear complexity of free(). the library is a decade old and I don't think it would be accepted if it was reviewed as it is today. _______________________________________________ Boost-users mailing list Boost-users@lists.boost.org http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost-users