I have a small question:
Foo *myFoo;
myFoo = new Foo(anotherFoo); // some deep copy of another object
myFoo = new Foo(yetAnotherFoo); // another deep copy of yet another object
Is this a memory leak and if yes, how can I avoid it properly? The situation in my program is, that 'myFoo' is a class member and I want to use it as a "one and only" storage-object for a deep copy of some other object from time to time (because the copied object is modified afterwards and I need the initial object for later comparison).
I have tried a simple workaround like:
// within a class method of the same class
if (myFoo!=NULL) delete myFoo;
myFoo = new Foo(fooToStore);
but this crashes my program as soon as the destructor is called. I am not sure if my (non-trivial) destructor is a bit buggy (different problem not to discuss here) or if deleting a class-member object via delete within a class method is forbidden in general.
Thanks a lot for your time and help - appreciate it! Mark