3

This is a miniature version of a code I'm running in production. I have found that, my real code, behaves differently under gcc and Intel compilers and my best guess is an undefined behavior. Please consider the following sample code:

#include <iostream>

struct baseFunctor{
    virtual double operator()(double x) const = 0;
};

class mathObj{
    const baseFunctor *tmp1, *tmp2;
public:
    void set(const baseFunctor& b1, const baseFunctor& b2){
        tmp1 = &b1;
        tmp2 = &b2;
    }
    double getValue(double x){
        return (tmp1->operator()(x) + tmp2->operator()(x));
    }
};

int main () {
    mathObj obj;

    struct squareFunctor: public baseFunctor {
        double operator()(double x) const { return x*x; }
    };
    struct cubeFunctor: public baseFunctor {
        double operator()(double x) const { return x*x*x; }
    };

    obj.set(squareFunctor(), cubeFunctor());
    std::cout << obj.getValue(10) << std::endl; 
    return 0;
}

Could obj.set(squareFunctor(), cubeFunctor()); invoke undefined behavior?

2
  • 2
    It looks like the references are binding to temporaries. So they become invalid when the statement ends.
    – Mysticial
    Sep 26, 2012 at 1:24
  • In my experience gcc will not crash but other compilers will when invoking undefined behavior like this.
    – Jesse Good
    Sep 26, 2012 at 1:26

1 Answer 1

5

Yes it most definitely does, because you are storing pointers to temporary values that are destroyed at the end of the statement, and then using them. Using a destructed object is undefined behaviour.

You need to create the values separately, and then call set with them:

cubeFunctor cf;
squareFunctor sf;

obj.set(sf, cf);

Note that you cannot solve this problem by storing the functors by value (unless you use templates), because that would cause slicing.

Also as a side note, you can change getValue to do

return (*tmp1)(x) + (*tmp2)(x);

To make it look a little prettier (and you still get dynamic dispatch).

2
  • Or just create them with the class declaration. :)
    – Xeo
    Sep 26, 2012 at 1:25
  • @Xeo yeah, didn't want to copy all the class stuff. Sep 26, 2012 at 1:25

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