Yes, I'm one of those fellows that is learning C++ coming from Java, being spoiled with an automatic garbage collector. There's a particular situation where I'm wondering whether I'm leaking memory or not. Let's consider in C++:
bool *test = new bool(false);
test = new bool(true);
delete test;
Am I leaking memory here? Or should I first call delete
before assigning a new value? Like this:
bool *test = new bool(false);
delete test;
test = new bool(true);
delete test;
My gut feeling tells me the first is right, as the pointer test
points at the same address in memory, and assigning a new value to its variable, will not change this address. Or does the new
operator allocate a different address in memory? Can anyone give me a clue, or did I get it wrong all together?
std::shared_ptr<int>
rather thanint*
and all your problems go away as the garbage collector now works. But you don;t even need to dynamically allocate the objects. Just usebool
rather thanbool*