In GMan's answer here, the destructor of the restore_base
class isn't virtual
, so I keep wondering how exactly that works. Normally you'd expect the destructor of restorer_base
to be executed only, after the object goes out of scope, but it seems that the derived restorer_holder
destructor is really called. Anyone care to enlighten me?
-
3This doesn't deserve a question of its own. Ask in the comments under the answer, and @GMan will will update the answer as necessary.– wilhelmtellFeb 13, 2011 at 17:56
-
possible duplicate of Which C++ Standard Library wrapper functions do you use?– wilhelmtellFeb 13, 2011 at 18:08
-
6@wilhelmtell No, it absolutely does. The const-ref trick is highly nontrivial and deserves a proper explanation.– Konrad RudolphFeb 13, 2011 at 18:11
-
@Konrad Rudolph: Absolutely agree. But somebody with a re of >50K should re-phrase the question so that people understand the real question.– Martin YorkFeb 13, 2011 at 18:27
-
@Martin: Then tell me how to rephrase it and I'll do so, 'cause I really don't know what else to call it. :)– XeoFeb 13, 2011 at 18:33
1 Answer
The standard case where you need a virtual destructor is
void foo()
{
scoped_ptr<Base> obj = factory_returns_a_Derived();
// ... use 'obj' here ...
}
And the standard case where you don't is
void foo()
{
Derived obj;
// ... use 'obj' here ...
}
GMan's code is doing something a little trickier, that turns out to be equivalent to the second case:
void foo()
{
Base& obj = Derived();
// ... use 'obj' here ...
}
obj
is a bare reference; normally, it would not trigger destructors at all. But it's initialized from an anonymous temporary object whose static type -- known to the compiler -- is Derived
. When that object's lifetime ends, the compiler will call the Derived
destructor. Normally an anonymous temporary object dies at the end of the expression that created it, but there's a special case for temporaries initializing a reference: they live till the reference itself dies, which here is the end of the scope. So you get pseudo-scoped_ptr
behavior and you don't need a virtual destructor.
EDIT: Since this has now come up twice: The reference does not have to be const
for this special rule to apply. C+98 [class.temporary]/5:
The second context [in which a temporary object is not destroyed at the end of the full-expression] is when a reference is bound to a temporary. The temporary to which the reference is bound or the temporary that is the complete object to a subobject of which the temporary is bound persists for the lifetime of the reference ...
Emphasis mine. There is no mention of const
in this language, so the reference does not have to be const
.
EDIT 2: Other rules in the standard prohibit creation of non-const references to temporary objects that are not lvalues. I suspect that at least some temporary objects are lvalues, but I don't know for certain. Regardless, that does not affect this rule. It would still be formally true that non-const references to temporary objects prolong their lifetime even if no strictly conforming C++ program could ever create such a reference. This might seem ridiculous, but you're supposed to read standardese this literally and pedantically. Every word counts, every word that isn't there counts.
-
slightly clarified the kind of reference that prolongs the life of a temporary, hope you don't mind... Feb 13, 2011 at 18:37
-
Thanks, that totally makes sense now! :) So with C++0x, would one use rvalue reference instead of the const reference?– XeoFeb 13, 2011 at 18:37
-
1@Eugen Thanks ... but I was looking at the standard (12.2p5 [class.temporary]) and I don't see anything in there about the reference having to be
const
, could you clarify where you got the restriction? @Xeo I don't really understand rvalue references, I have no idea if they'd be appropriate in this case.– zwolFeb 13, 2011 at 18:42 -
You're totally right, I was reading the
Derived()
call wrong (as a function call and thinking of this herbsutter.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!2D4327CC297151BB!378.entry ). Rolled back my unnecessary & incorrect modification. Feb 13, 2011 at 19:06 -
1
error: invalid initialization of non-const reference of type ‘Base&’ from an rvalue of type ‘Derived’
I'm getting this with g++ 4.6.3 and-std=c++98
. I was always convinced theconst
was necessary. I feel very confused :P ideone.com/rIDf4t Nov 12, 2013 at 14:05