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I am a C# developer and I find strange that when I run the following code in C++:

std::string original = "Hello";

std::string st = original + "World";
const char *c = st.c_str();

const char *c2 = (original + "World").c_str();

std::cout << "c  = '" << c << "'" << std::endl;
std::cout << "c2 = '" << c2 << "'" << std::endl;

I get the following output:

c  = 'HelloWorld'
c2 = ''

In C# a similar construct will result in c and c2 having the same value ("Hello World"). My guess would be that the scope of the result of (original + "World") ends on the right ), so c_str() is called on an invalid input. Is that correct? Is there a better way of achieving this other than creating variables to hold temporary results?

Thanks!

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    The problem is that you have a pointer to a buffer that is invalidated after the object is destroyed. Try this instead std::cout << "c2 = '" << (original + "World").c_str() << "'" << std::endl;
    – imreal
    Aug 4, 2015 at 14:43
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    @VictorPolevoy: Such is the nature of undefined behavior. Aug 4, 2015 at 14:47
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    @VictorPolevoy even if you see desired output that does not mean it works
    – Slava
    Aug 4, 2015 at 14:47
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    I don't see the purpose in drawing conclusions on what C++ should do based on what C# does. You know they're different languages, right? Aug 4, 2015 at 14:56
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    It would be more constructive to learn how C++ works in isolation than to learn it as a function of differences from some other language. Aug 4, 2015 at 15:02

2 Answers 2

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My guess would be that the scope of the result of (original + "World") ends on the right ), so c_str() is called on an invalid input. Is that correct?

Not quite, but close. c_str() itself is fine, but that pointer become invalid after the end of the statement, so using c2 afterwards leads to UB.

Is there a better way of achieving this other than creating variables to hold temporary results?

You can assign it to const reference:

const std::string &ref = original + "World";
const char *c2 = ref.c_str();

But I don't think that any better than creating variable.

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'c2' here is initialized with a pointer into a temporary object that ceases to exist at the semicolon. Therefore this is undefined behavior. You'll need to use an intermediate variable:

const auto temp(original + "World");
const char* c2 = temp.c_str();
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    Additional comment: Coming from the C# world you are used to having your memory managed for you with garbage collection etc. There you would end up with a reference to the temporary object so it would stick around. In C++ you have to be much more aware of the lifetime of objects. Aug 4, 2015 at 14:48

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