I encountered a very strange (at least to me) behaviour of a exception class I have thrown. What I do is that I allocate memory via new
for a string in the constructor of the exception class and fill it with characters. So far everything is fine. When debugging the code I can see in Visual Studio that the pointer actually has the right content.
Now the weird thing happens. My next breakpoint is in the catch - block to which the exception is passed after being constructed and here I can see in the debugger that the content of the string contained in the exception object is severly corrupted. Even though the address didn't change at all! So it seems like the content of the string gets destructed.
So I put a breakpoint into the exceptions destructor and really, it is being called before the catch - block is entered. This confuses me a lot since I learned to pass exceptions by reference to the catch block. But what good is that if the destructor gets called before I can access the dynamically created data...
I constructed a minimal example that shows the situation I am in:
#include <iostream>
#include <cstring>
class test_exception {
public:
test_exception();
~test_exception() {
delete[] _msg;
}
// Getter Functions
char* errorMessage() const {
return _msg;
}
private:
char* _msg;
};
test_exception::test_exception()
{
_msg = new char[22];
strcpy(_msg, "This is a test string");
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
try {
throw test_exception();
} catch (const test_exception& err) {
std::cout << err.errorMessage() << std::endl;
}
std::cin.get();
return 0;
}
It would be create if someone could tell me if it is weird MS behaviour or if I misunderstood how try - catch - blocks should be used.