Warning from gcc 7.1 is ./prevector.h:450:25: warning:
'*((void*)(&<anonymous>)+8).prevector<28, unsigned char>::_union.prevector<28, unsigned char>::direct_or_indirect::<anonymous>.prevector<28, unsigned char>::direct_or_indirect::<unnamed struct>::indirect'
may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
45a5aaf Only call clear on prevector if it isn't trivially destructible and don't loop in clear (Jeremy Rubin)
aaa02e7 Add prevector destructor benchmark (Jeremy Rubin)
Tree-SHA512: 52bc8163b65b71310252f2d578349d0ddc364a6c23795c5e06e101f5449f04c96cbdca41c0cffb1974b984b8e33006471137d92b8dd4a81a98e922610a94132a
Implement `begin_ptr` and `end_ptr` in terms of C++11 code,
and add a comment that they are deprecated.
Follow-up to developer notes update in 654a211622.
swap was using an incorrect condition to determine when to apply an optimization
(not swapping the full direct[] when swapping two indirect prevectors).
Rather than correct the optimization I'm removing it for simplicity. Removing
this optimization minutely improves performance in the typical (currently only)
usage of member swap(), which is swapping with a freshly value-initialized
object.
Fixes a bug in which pop_back did not call the deleted item's destructor.
Using the most general erase() implementation to implement all the others
prevents similar bugs because the coupling between deallocation and destructor
invocation only needs to be maintained in one place.
Also reduces duplication of complex memmove logic.