> On Nov 16, 2018, at 5:33 PM, Sven Barth via fpc-pascal
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> When a function contains at least one anonymous function then a capture
> object is created which is shared by all anonymous functions in the function
> and also all captured local variables are moved there. If there is no
> variable to capture the capture object is nevertheless created.
But is it an object on the heap with reference counting?
I read a number of articles on Lambda support in c++ and they seem to think in
*some* instances the compiler can inline the lambda and see no speed penalty
but they depends on it not being passed outside of the declaring scope. c++ may
get away with this because you need to manually request captured variables.
Regards,
Ryan Joseph
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