Am I doing this right? I'm trying to delegate a C++ class constructor as it's basically the same code repeating 3 times.. I read up on C++x11 and read that g++ 4.7.2 allows this but I'm not sure if I'm doing it right:
Bitmap::Bitmap(HBITMAP Bmp)
{
//Construct some bitmap stuff..
}
Bitmap::Bitmap(WORD ResourceID)
{
HBITMAP BMP = (HBITMAP)LoadImage(GetModuleHandle(NULL), MAKEINTRESOURCE(ResourceID), IMAGE_BITMAP, 0, 0, LR_SHARED);
Bitmap(BMP); //Delegates to the above constructor? Or does this create a temporary?
}
OR do I need to do:
Bitmap::Bitmap(HBITMAP Bmp)
{
//Construct some bitmap stuff..
}
Bitmap::Bitmap(WORD ResourceID) : Bitmap((HBITMAP)LoadImage(GetModuleHandle(NULL), MAKEINTRESOURCE(ResourceID), IMAGE_BITMAP, 0, 0, LR_SHARED))
{
}
int(5);
would.Bitmap(BMP);
declares a local variable, namedBMP
of typeBitmap
. It does not create a temporary, unnamed object. It should result in a multiple definition error sinceBMP
already exists (typeHBITMAP
). Furthermore,Bitmap
is required to have a empty/default/standard constructor for this line to be compileable.Bitmap(BMP);
definitely declares a temporary object of typeBitmap
withBMP
as a parameter. This code was actually compiled at the time of the post. I was curious and asked what it does.