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Modern C++ Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   Modern C++ Programming Cookbook Recipes to explore data structure, multithreading, and networking in C++17

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786465184
Length 590 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Marius Bancila Marius Bancila
Author Profile Icon Marius Bancila
Marius Bancila
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Learning Modern Core Language Features FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Numbers and Strings 3. Exploring Functions 4. Preprocessor and Compilation 5. Standard Library Containers, Algorithms, and Iterators 6. General Purpose Utilities 7. Working with Files and Streams 8. Leveraging Threading and Concurrency 9. Robustness and Performance 10. Implementing Patterns and Idioms 11. Exploring Testing Frameworks 12. Bibliography

Using atomic types


The thread library provides support for managing threads and synchronizing access to shared data with mutex and locks. The standard library provides support for the complementary, lower-level atomic operations on data, that is, indivisible operations that can be executed concurrently from different threads on shared data without the risk of producing race conditions and without the use of locks. The support it provides includes atomic types, atomic operations, and memory synchronization ordering. In this recipe, we will see how to use some of these types and functions.

Getting ready

All the atomic types and operations are defined in the std namespace in the <atomic> header. 

How to do it...

The following is a series of typical operations that use atomic types:

  • Use the std::atomic class template to create atomic objects that support atomic operations, such as loading, storing, or performing arithmetic or bitwise operations:
        std::atomic<int> counter {0};

...
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