Namespaces
Variants
Views
Actions

std::unordered_multimap<Key,T,Hash,KeyEqual,Allocator>::~unordered_multimap

From cppreference.com
 
 
 
 
~unordered_multimap();
(since C++11)

Destructs the unordered_multimap. The destructors of the elements are called and the used storage is deallocated. Note, that if the elements are pointers, the pointed-to objects are not destroyed.

[edit] Complexity

Linear in the size of the unordered_multimap.