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What is the difference between this:

Myclass *object = new Myclass();

and

Myclass object = new Myclass();

I have seen that a lot of C++ libraries like wxWidgets, OGRE etc use the first method... Why?

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5 Answers

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The second is wrong !

You may use

MyClass object;

That will work.

Now, concerning how to choose between these two possibilities, it mainly depends on how long your object should live. See there for a thorough answer.

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vote up 2 vote down
Myclass *object = new Myclass(); //object is on the heap
Myclass object; //object is on the stack

You create objects on the heap if you plan on using them throughout a long period of time and you create objects on the stack for a short lifetime (or scope).

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vote up 2 vote down

The first is correct.

The second will generally not compile. And if it does compile then the class is doing some complicated things in a constructor/assignment operator. And it's probably leaking memory.

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vote up 5 vote down

The first example creates a pointer to MyClass and initializes it to point to the result of the new operator.

The second will likely not compile, as it is trying to create a MyClass object and assign it to a MyClass pointer. This could work in the unlikely event that you have a MyClass constructor that accepts a MyClass pointer.

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vote up 1 vote down

The new operator returns a pointer to the object it creates, so the expression Myclass object = new Myclass(); is invalid.

Other languages don't have explicit pointers like C++ so you can write statements like Myclass object = new Myclass();, but in C++ this is simply not possible. The return type of new Myclass(); is a pointer to a Myclass object, i.e. Myclass *.

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