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c++ - "as if" in language standards

What is the exact meaning of the phrase "as if" in the standard and how does it work when a user can modify individual parts of the behavior.

The question is in regards to the C++ standard when talking about the nothrow version of operator new. 18.4.1.1/7 reads (my emphasis):

This nothrow version of operator new returns a pointer obtained as if acquired from the ordinary version.

My understanding is that "as if" does not require a specific implementation as long as the behavior is appropriate. So if operator new was implemented like this (I know this is not a compliant implementation as there is no loop or use of the new_handler; but I'm shortening that to focus on my issue):

// NOTE - not fully compliant - for illustration purposes only.
void *operator new(std::size_t s)
{
    void *p = malloc(s);
    if (p == 0)
        throw std::bad_alloc();
    return p;
}

Then it would be legal to write the nothrow version like this:

// NOTE - not fully compliant - for illustration purposes only.
void *operator new(std::size_t s, const std::nothrow_t &nt)
{
    return malloc(s);
}

But let's say a program replaces operator new to use some other allocator. Does "as if" mean the compiler has to automatically change the behavior of the nothrow version to use this other allocator? Is the developer required to replace both the plain and nothrow versions?

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From 1.9 "Program execution:

conforming implementations are required to emulate (only) the observable behavior of the abstract machine

and in an informational footnote:

This provision is sometimes called the “as-if” rule, because an implementation is free to disregard any requirement of this International Standard as long as the result is as if the requirement had been obeyed, as far as can be determined from the observable behavior of the program. For instance, an actual implementation need not evaluate part of an expression if it can deduce that its value is not used and that no side effects affecting the observable behavior of the program are produced.

The standard does specifically note that the "as-if" requirement is binding on a replacement version of the nothrow version of operator new(). However, as I read it, that requirement would fall to the programmer overriding operator new() not the compiler. The flip side of this responsibility is that I think the standard pretty much requires the default implementation of the nothrow operator new() provided by the library must do something along the lines of calling the throwing new in a try/catch and return 0 if std::bad_alloc is caught.

Where the "as if rule" could come in to play here is if the compiler/linker/whatever were smart enough to figure out that when the default throwing new() was in being used, the default non-throwing new() could take the shortcut, but if the default throwing new() was overridden, the default non-throwing new() would have to act differently. I'm sure this is technically possible for an implementation (even if you probably can't express it in standard C++). I'd be surprised if there was ever an implementation that did this.

I might be reading too much into the requirement, but I think that's what can be inferred.


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