Smart pointers to children
The smart pointer classes std::unique_ptr
and std::shared_ptr
are for memory management. Having such a smart pointer means, that you own the pointer. However, when creating a QObject
or a derived type with a QObject
parent, the ownership (the responsibility to clean up) is handed over to the parent QObject
. In that case, the standard library smart pointers are unnecessary, or even dangerous, since they can potentially cause a double deletion. Yikes!
Raw pointers to orphans
However, when a QObject
(or derived type) is created on the heap without a parent QObject
things are very different. In that case you should not just hold a raw pointer, but a smart pointer, preferably a std::unique_ptr
to the object. That way you gain resource safety. If you later hand the object ownership to a parent QObject
you can use std::unique_ptr<T>::release()
, like so:
auto obj = std::make_unique<MyObject>();
// ... do some stuff that might throw ...
QObject parentObject;
obj->setParent( &parentObject );
obj.release();
If the stuff you do before giving your orphan a parent throws an exception, then you would have a memory leak, if you used raw pointer to hold the object. But the code above is save against such a leak.
On a more general note
It is not modern C++ advice to avoid raw pointers all together, but to avoid owning raw pointers. I might add another modern C++ advice: Don't use smart pointers for objects that are owned by some other program entity.
main()
so it will be automatically collected.