Say, I have a class A
Now when I am doing
A a(A());
what exactly happens?
Despite appearances, A a(A());
is not an object definition. Instead, it declares a function called a
that returns an A
and takes a pointer to a function taking nothing and returning an A
.
If you want an object definition, you have to add another pair of parenthesis:
A a((A()));
A a{A{}}
in C++11 to call the copy ctor if you don't want an extra set of parenthesis.
If written correctly - A a((A()))
- the compiler creates the temporary directly in the constructor context to prevent an extra copy. It's called copy elision. Look this up, along with RVO and NRVO.
From your comment:
A a = A();
this is exactly equivalent to
A a((A())); // note extra pair of parenthesis
As @Naveen correctly pointed out, A a(A());
is subject to most vexing parse, so you need an extra set of paranthesis there to actually create an object.
A a(B())
work?" is a perfect duplicate for "Why doesn'tA a(A())
work?".