When std::future is in the "empty" state, it means that it does not refer to any shared state. This can occur when a default-constructed std::future object is used or when the std::future object has already been moved from or has had its shared state released. Any attempt to access the value from an empty std::future object will result in an exception.
Asked: 2021-04-30 11:00:00 +0000
Seen: 9 times
Last updated: Feb 23 '23