Currently I am working on a project where goto statements are heavely used. The main purpose of goto statements is to have one cleanup section in routine rather than multiple return statements. Like below
BOOL foo()
{
BOOL bRetVal = FALSE;
int *p=NULL;
p = new int;
if(p==NULL)
{
cout<<" OOM \n";
goto Exit;
}
// Lot of code...
Exit:
if(p)
{
delete p;
p= NULL;
}
return bRetVal;
}
This makes much easier as we can track our clean up code at one section in code.ie after Exit label.
However I have read many places its bad practice to have goto statements.
Currently I am reading Code Complete book and it says that we need to use variable close to their declarations. If we use goto then we need to declare/initialize all variables before first use of goto otherwise compiler give errors that initialization of xx variable is skipped by goto statement.
I am not sure which way is right. any thoughts???
From Scott's comment It looks like using goto to jump from one section to another is bad as it make the code hard to read and understand.
But if we use goto just to go forward and to one label then it should be fine???