First Question: Why I need to overload the equal operator while the constructor can do the job?
The constructor is designed to "construct" an object ... while there is something called a copy-constructor, it is not designed to actually copy an already existing object into another already existing object of the same (or convertable) type ... that is the job of the operator=
. Also you are not "overloading" the operator=
method, but rather creating a user-defined version of the method to be used instead of the default compiler-created method for the object type which would simply brute-force copy the bits of the memory footprint of one object into another ... if your object is managing it's own pointers, etc., such a brute-force copy can be a very bad thing as pointer ownership becomes ambiguous, etc.