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c++ - In C++11, when are a lambda expression's bound variables supposed to be captured-by-value?

I have a Visual Studio 2010 C++ program, the main function of which is:

vector<double> v(10);

double start = 0.0; double increment = 10.0;
auto f = [&start, increment]() { return start += increment; };
generate(v.begin(), v.end(), f);
for(auto it = v.cbegin(); it != v.cend(); ++it) { cout << *it << ", "; }

cout << endl << "Changing vars to try again..." << endl;
start = 15; increment = -1.5;
generate(v.begin(), v.end(), f);
for(auto it = v.cbegin(); it != v.cend(); ++it) { cout << *it << ", "; }
return 0;

When I compile this in MS Visual Studio, the first generate does what I expected, resulting in "10, 20, ... 100, ". The second does not; the lambda "sees" the change in start but not the change in increment, so I get "25, 35, ... 115, ".

MSDN explains that

The Visual C++ compiler binds a lambda expression to its captured variables when the expression is declared instead of when the expression is called. ... [T]he reassignment of [a variable captured by value] later in the program does not affect the result of the expression.

So my question is: is this standards-compliant C++11 behavior, or is it Microsoft's own eccentric implementation? Bonus: if it is standard behavior, why was the standard written that way? Does it have to do with enforcing referential transparency for functional programming?

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1 Answer

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With a lambda expression, the bound variables are captured at the time of declaration.

This sample will make it very clear: https://ideone.com/Ly38P

 std::function<int()> dowork()
 {
      int answer = 42;
      auto lambda = [answer] () { return answer; };

      // can do what we want
      answer = 666;
      return lambda;
 }

 int main()
 {
      auto ll = dowork();
      return ll(); // 42
 }

It is clear that the capture must be happening before the invocation, since the variables being captured don't even exist (not in scope, neither in lifetime) anymore at a later time.


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