6

I have written the following source

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

template <class T>
class AAA
{
public:
    void f() { cout << T() << " "; }
};

int main ( void )
{
    AAA<int*> a;
    AAA<int> b;

    a.f(); /// in this case, T() == NULL??
    b.f(); 

    return 0;
}

and console print is 00000000 0. ( in visual studio 2010 )

if T is int*, T() == NULL? and is it always true?

2

3 Answers 3

9

This is called value-initialization, you are guaranteed 0.

Plus, you don't need such a complicated example to demonstrate:

typedef int* T;
int main()
{
   T x = T();
   std::cout << x;
}
2
  • 2
    God, 55k reputation and you still answer those silly question in less than a minute. Why don't you keep your knowledge for more complicated question, giving to newcomers the chance to build some reputation?
    – akappa
    Aug 4, 2012 at 17:49
  • I see. I upvoted your answer, to support reaching your milestone :P
    – akappa
    Aug 4, 2012 at 18:23
8

Yes. A value-initialized pointer is always null.

0

Yes. It is null pointer. And why it is printing:

00000000

because it is using 4-byte to represent the null-address (in hexadecimal format).

On 64-bit machine, it may print this instead (hexadecimal format):

0000000000000000

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