1

I have the following program snippet:

Polynomial Polynomial:: add(const Polynomial b)
{
    Polynomial c;
    c.setRoot(internalAdd(root, c.root));
    c.setRoot(internalAdd(b.root, c.root));
    return c;
}

c = (a.add(b));

to my understanding, this code is suppose to add a and b together, then assign the resulting polynomial to c by calling the copy constructor.

however, when I actually test it,

  • c calls the copy constructor right away and tries to copy b,
  • then a and b add
  • then c tries to get the resulting polynomial via assignment operator
  • then the program crashes

what can i do to fix this?

2
  • You will need to show us the copy constructor and assignment operator to detect the reason of crash. Btw the behavior you see is more or less explainable lookup Named Return Value Optimization(NRVO).
    – Alok Save
    Nov 19, 2011 at 6:22
  • Operator-keyword tag? Are you trying to write Polynomial::operator +(const Polynomial& rhs) const?
    – johnsyweb
    Nov 19, 2011 at 6:26

1 Answer 1

5
Polynomial Polynomial::add(const Polynomial& b)
                                           ^

If you don't want the argument to be copied, pass it in as a reference as above.

This probably won't fix your crash - no way to tell what is causing that without more of your code (and some debugging on your side to pinpoint it), but it will remove the need for copy-constructing the Polynomial argument.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.