I'll look past that you're calling delete
on a stack-allocated object, and examine the usage of delete this
in general.
There is a school of thought that says "It's not a good idea". However, I have seen it used a number of times with implementations of reference counted objects.
In COM, the framework requires that all objects would be created by a factory method, and then released again by a call to "Release".
class MyRefCountedObject : public IUnknown
{
private:
// Making the constructor and destructor private
// so that the object can only be allocated as a pointer
MyRefCountedObject() {}
~MyRefCountedObject() {}
MyRefCountedObject(const MyRefCountedObject& mrco) {}
int _refCount;
public:
static MyRefCountedObject* CreateInstance()
{
MyRefCountedObject* pObject = new MyRefCountedObject();
pObject->_refCount = 1;
return pObject;
}
void Release()
{
if(--_refCount == 0)
{
delete this;
}
};
void AddRef()
{
++_refCount;
}
}
Note - that is not a complete implementation, just giving an idea of the logic.
But, by making the constructor private, I can ensure that this would only ever be allocated on the heap.