std::string::c_str() and temporaries

The pointer returned by std::string::c_str() points to memory
maintained by the string object. It remains valid until a non-const
function is called on the string object, or the string object is
destructed. The string object you’re concerned about is a temporary.
It will be destructed at the end of the full expression, not before and
not after. In your case, the end of the full expression is after the
call to consumer, so your code is safe. It wouldn’t be if consumer
saved the pointer somewhere, with the idea of using it later.

The lifetime of temporaries has been strictly defined since C++98.
Before that, it varied, depending on the compiler, and the code you’ve
written wouldn’t have worked with g++ (pre 1995, roughly—g++
changed this almost immediately when the standards committee voted it).
(There wasn’t an std::string then either, but the same issues affect
any user written string class.)

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