I assume when I do char* = "string" its the same thing as char* = new char[6]. I believe these strings are created on the heap instead of the stack. So do I need to destroy them or free their memory when I'm done using them or do they get destroyed by themselves.
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No. You only need to manually free strings when you manually allocate the memory yourself using the "malloc" function (in C) or the "new" operator (in C++). If you do not use malloc or new, then the char* or string will be created on the stack or as a compile-time constant. | ||||
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No. When you say:
You are assigning c to a "pre-existing" string constant which is NOT the same as:
Only in the latter case are you allocating memory on the heap. So you'd call delete when you're done. | |||
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No. What the first one does is create a constant. Modifying it is undefined behaviour. But to answer your question; no, you don't have to destroy them. And just a note, always use | |||
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They're not the same. Your first example is a constant string, so it's definitely not allocated from the heap. Your second example is a runtime memory allocation of 6 characters, and that comes from the stack. You don't want to delete your first example, but you need to delete [] your second example. | |||||
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The name of the game is "destroy only what you created". Here are the pairs:
Since you created the 2nd string using new[], the onus is on you to destroy it with delete[]. Call Now if your code is convoluted enough and makes keeping track of deletions difficult, consider the usage of scoped pointers or auto pointers. The scoped_ptr class from boost library boost::scoped_ptr is a good place to begin. Also look into the RAII idiom, pretty handy and useful stuff. | |||
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You don't know where the string literals are stored. It may even be read-only memory, so your code should read:
And a new char array should be deleted just like any other dynamically allocated memory area. | |||
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new is always an allocation whereas defining a string inline actually embeds the data in the program itself and cannot be changed (some compilers allow this by a smart trick, don't bother). Some compilers type inline strings so that you cannot modify the buffer.
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