I have a type whose destructor has been explicitly deleted; I'd like to make an instance of that type a member of another class.
My expectation is that should be fine provided no attempt is made to delete an instance of the containing class (ie, the containing class's destructor would be invalid).
However, both clang (v3.3) and g++ (v 4.6.3) give an error when an attempt is made to instantiate the constructor of the parent class.
For example:
class DeletedDtor
{
public:
DeletedDtor() {}
~DeletedDtor() = delete;
};
class MyClass
{
public:
MyClass() = default;
~MyClass() = delete;
private:
DeletedDtor a;
};
int main() {
MyClass *p = new MyClass();
}
Under g++, this gives:
test.cpp: In function ‘int main()’:
test.cpp:19:30: error: use of deleted function ‘MyClass::MyClass()’
test.cpp:11:5: error: ‘MyClass::MyClass()’ is implicitly deleted because the default definition would be ill-formed:
test.cpp:11:5: error: use of deleted function ‘DeletedDtor::~DeletedDtor()’
test.cpp:5:5: error: declared here
Defining the MyClass constructor myself, rather than letting it take the default implementation, doesn't help either:
class DeletedDtor
{
public:
DeletedDtor() {}
~DeletedDtor() = delete;
};
class MyClass
{
public:
MyClass();
~MyClass() = delete;
private:
DeletedDtor a;
};
MyClass::MyClass() : a() {}
int main() {
MyClass *p = new MyClass();
}
Which gives the compilation error:
test2.cpp: In constructor ‘MyClass::MyClass()’:
test2.cpp:18:24: error: use of deleted function ‘DeletedDtor::~DeletedDtor()’
test2.cpp:5:5: error: declared here
MyClass
as well.