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alignas specifier (since C++11)

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | language

Specifies the alignment requirement of a type or an object.

Contents

[edit] Syntax

alignas( expression )
alignas( type-id )
alignas( pack ... )
1) alignas(expression must be an integral constant expression that evaluates to zero, or to a valid value for an alignment or extended alignment.
2) Equivalent to alignas(alignof(type))
3) Equivalent to multiple alignas specifiers applied to the same declaration, one for each member of the parameter pack, which can be either type or non-type parameter pack.

[edit] Explanation

The alignas specifier may be applied to the declaration of a variable or a non-bitfield class data member, or it can be applied to the declaration or definition of a class/struct/union or enumeration. It cannot be applied to a function parameter or to the exception parameter of a catch clause.

The object or the type declared by such a declaration will have its alignment requirement equal to the stricted (largest) non-zero expression of all alignas specifiers used in the declaration, unless it would weaken the natural alignment of the type.

[edit] Notes

Invalid non-zero alignments, such as alignas(3) are ill-formed, but alignments that are not used because they are weaker than natural alignment or weaker than another alignas on the same declaration are simply ignored. alignas(0) is always ignored.

As of the ISO C11 standard, the C language has the _Alignas keyword and defines alignas as a preprocessor macro expanding to the keyword in the header <stdalign.h>, but in C++ this is a keyword, and the headers <stdalign.h> and <cstdalign> do not define such macro. They do, however, define the macro constant __alignas_is_defined.

[edit] Keywords

alignas

[edit] Example

// every object of type sse_t will be aligned to 16-byte boundary
struct alignas(16) sse_t
{
  float sse_data[4];
};
 
// the array "cacheline" will be aligned to 128-byte boundary
alignas(128) char cacheline[128];



[edit] See also

alignof operator queries alignment requirements of a type (since C++11) [edit]
obtains the type's alignment requirements
(class template) [edit]
C documentation for _Alignas