Wow....
MyObject::MyObject( const MyObject& oCopy)
{
*this = oCopy;//is this deep or shallow?
}
It is neither. It is a call to the assignment operator.
Since you have not finished the construction of the object this is probably ill-advised (though perfectly valid). It is more traditional to define the assignment operator in terms of the copy constructor though (see copy and swap idium).
const MyObject& MyObject::operator=(const MyObject& oRhs)
{
if( this != oRhs ){
members = oRhs.members;
.....//there is a lot of members
}
return *this;
}
Basically fine, though normally the result of assignment is not cont.
But if you do it this way you need to divide up your processing a bit to make it exception safe. It should look more like this:
const MyObject& MyObject::operator=(const MyObject& oRhs)
{
if( this == oRhs )
{
return *this;
}
// Stage 1:
// Copy all members of oRhs that can throw during copy into temporaries.
// That way if they do throw you have not destroyed this obbject.
// Stage 2:
// Copy anything that can **not** throw from oRhs into this object
// Use swap on the temporaries to copy them into the object in an exception sage mannor.
// Stage 3:
// Free any resources.
return *this;
}
Of course there is a simpler way of doing this using copy and swap idum:
MyObject& MyObject::operator=(MyObject oRhs) // use pass by value to get copy
{
this.swap(oRhs);
return *this;
}
void MyObject::swap(MyObject& oRhs) throws()
{
// Call swap on each member.
return *this;
}
If there is nothing to do in the destructor don't declare it (unless it needs to be virtual).
MyObject::~MyObject(){
//there is nothing here
}
Here you are declaring a pointer (not an object) so the constructor is not called (as pointers don;t have constructors).
const MyObject * mpoOriginal;//this gets initialized in the constructor
Here you are calling new to create the object.
Are you sure you want to do this? A dynamically allocated object must be destroyed; ostensibly via delete, but more usually in C++ you wrap pointers inside a smart pointer to make sure the owner correctly and automatically destroys the object.
int main()
{ //^^^^ Note main() has a lower case m
mpoOriginal = new MyObject();
return DoSomething();
}
But since you probably don't want a dynamic object. What you want is automatic object that is destroyed when it goes out of scope. Also you probably should not be using a global variable (pass it as a parameter otherwise your code is working using the side affects that are associated with global state).
int main()
{
const MyObject mpoOriginal;
return DoSomething(mpoOriginal);
}
You do not need to call new to make a copy just create an object (passing the object you want to copy).
bool DoSomething(MyObject const& data)
{
MyObject poCopied (data); //the copy
//lots of stuff going on
// No need to delete.
// delete poCopied;//this causes the crash - can't step into using GDB
// When it goes out of scope it is auto destroyed (as it is automatic).
return true;
}
operator=(const MyObject&)look like? – Sjoerd Aug 25 '11 at 16:29operator=! Good grief. That's your problem right there. But to answer your original question, your copy constructor has the semantics of your assignment operator, so to tell whether it's shallow or deep you need to look at the assignment operator code. But I don't think this is your real problem, the real problem is that you have an unmanageable mess for a class. – john Aug 25 '11 at 17:00