What is the use of having destructor as private?
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Such an object can never be created on the stack. Always on the heap. And deletion has to be done via a friend or a member. A product may use a single Object hierarchy and a custom memory-manager -- such scenarios may use a private dtor.
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If you're doing some sort of reference counting thing, you can have the object (or manager that has been "friend"ed) responsible for counting the number of references to itself and delete it when the number hits zero. A private dtor would prevent anybody else from deleting it when there were still references to it. |
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When you do not want users to access the destructor, i.e., you want the object to only be destroyed through other means. http://blogs.msdn.com/larryosterman/archive/2005/07/01/434684.aspx gives an example, where the object is reference counted and should only be destroyed by the object itself when count goes to zero. |
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The class can only be deleted by itself. Useful if you are creating some try of reference counted object. Then only the release method can delete the object, possibly helping you avoid errors. |
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COM uses this strategy for deleting the instance. COM makes the destructor private and provides an interface for deleting the instance. Here is an example of what a Release method would look like.
ATL COM objects are a prime example of this pattern. |
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I know you were asking about private destructor. Here is how I use protected ones. The idea is you don't want to delete main class through the pointer to class that adds extra functionality to the main.
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It might be a way to deal with the problem in Windows where each module can use a different heap, such as the Debug heap. If that problem isn't handled correctly bad things can happen. |
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