Here and there people keep talking about memory leaks which occur due unreleased event listeners. I think this is very important problem. Very serious and very important... if it really exists.
I have tried myself to reproduce the problem but all my attempts failed: I just can not make my application leak memory :( While it sounds good, I am still worried: maybe I am missing something.
So maybe can somebody provide a very simple source code sample which causes memory leaks?
I have created a small VB.NET application as a demo: it contains one Windows form and one class.
Windows form: it has a collection object (named "c") adn two buttons: one to add 10 items to collection and another one to clear the collection:
Public Class Form1
Dim c As New Collection
Private Sub btnAddItem_Click(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnAddItem.Click
For i As Integer = 1 To 10
Dim m As New MyType
c.Add(m)
Next
Me.Text = c.Count
End Sub
Private Sub btnClear_Click(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnClear.Click
For Each item As MyType In c
item.Dispose()
Next
c.Clear()
Me.Text = c.Count
End Sub
End Class
MyType class: it has big m_Image object, which is big so you can see your memory is really taken by MyType instances :)
Imports System.Drawing
Public Class MyType
Implements IDisposable
Private m_Image As Bitmap
Public Sub New()
AddHandler Application.Idle, AddressOf Application_Idle
m_Image = New Bitmap(1024, 1024)
End Sub
Private Sub Application_Idle(sender As Object, e As EventArgs)
End Sub
#Region "IDisposable Support"
Private disposedValue As Boolean
Protected Overridable Sub Dispose(disposing As Boolean)
If Not Me.disposedValue Then
If disposing Then
m_Image.Dispose()
End If
End If
Me.disposedValue = True
End Sub
Public Sub Dispose() Implements IDisposable.Dispose
Dispose(True)
GC.SuppressFinalize(Me)
End Sub
#End Region
End Class