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_SECURE_SCL_THROWS

Defines whether incorrect use of Checked Iterators causes an exception or a program termination. If defined as 1, an out of range iterator use causes an exception at runtime. If defined as 0, the program is terminated by calling invalid_parameter. The default value for _SECURE_SCL_THROWS is 0, meaning the program will be terminated by default. Requires _SECURE_SCL to also be defined.

Remarks

To enable checked iterators to throw an exception on incorrect use, set _SECURE_SCL to 1 and _SECURE_SCL_THROWS to 1:

#define _SECURE_SCL 1
#define _SECURE_SCL_THROWS 1

To enable checked iterators to terminate your program on incorrect use, set _SECURE_SCL to 1 and _SECURE_SCL_THROWS to 0:

#define _SECURE_SCL 1
#define _SECURE_SCL_THROWS 0

To disable checked iterators, set _SECURE_SCL to 0.

See Also

Reference

Checked Iterators

Debug Iterator Support

Safe Libraries: Standard C++ Library