Standard reference
For a less technical view & introduction - skip to this answer.
For common cases where copy elision occurs - skip to this answer.
Copy elision is defined in the standard in:
12.8 Copying and moving class objects [class.copy]
as
31) When certain criteria are met, an implementation is allowed to omit the copy/move construction of a class
object, even if the copy/move constructor and/or destructor for the object have side effects. In such cases,
the implementation treats the source and target of the omitted copy/move operation as simply two different
ways of referring to the same object, and the destruction of that object occurs at the later of the times
when the two objects would have been destroyed without the optimization.123 This elision of copy/move
operations, called copy elision, is permitted in the following circumstances (which may be combined to
eliminate multiple copies):
— in a return statement in a function with a class return type, when the expression is the name of a
non-volatile automatic object (other than a function or catch-clause parameter) with the same cvunqualified
type as the function return type, the copy/move operation can be omitted by constructing
the automatic object directly into the function’s return value
— in a throw-expression, when the operand is the name of a non-volatile automatic object (other than a
function or catch-clause parameter) whose scope does not extend beyond the end of the innermost
enclosing try-block (if there is one), the copy/move operation from the operand to the exception
object (15.1) can be omitted by constructing the automatic object directly into the exception object
— when a temporary class object that has not been bound to a reference (12.2) would be copied/moved
to a class object with the same cv-unqualified type, the copy/move operation can be omitted by
constructing the temporary object directly into the target of the omitted copy/move
— when the exception-declaration of an exception handler (Clause 15) declares an object of the same type
(except for cv-qualification) as the exception object (15.1), the copy/move operation can be omitted
by treating the exception-declaration as an alias for the exception object if the meaning of the program
will be unchanged except for the execution of constructors and destructors for the object declared by
the exception-declaration.
123) Because only one object is destroyed instead of two, and one copy/move constructor is not executed, there is still one
object destroyed for each one constructed.
The example given is:
class Thing {
public:
Thing();
~Thing();
Thing(const Thing&);
};
Thing f() {
Thing t;
return t;
}
Thing t2 = f();
and explained:
Here the criteria for elision can be combined to eliminate two calls to the copy constructor of class Thing:
the copying of the local automatic object t into the temporary object for the return value of function f()
and the copying of that temporary object into object t2. Effectively, the construction of the local object t
can be viewed as directly initializing the global object t2, and that object’s destruction will occur at program
exit. Adding a move constructor to Thing has the same effect, but it is the move construction from the
temporary object to t2 that is elided.