Yes and no, you are passing the vector by value:
void StateInit(vector<CButton*> listBtn)
{
_m_pListBtn = listBtn;
};
Wich means that listBtn is a copy of vector A (asuming we are calling vector A the one passed as parameter of StateInit), if you delete vector A, vector B will still have the collection of pointers and they will be valid since the destruction of a vector of pointers doesnt delete the pointed objects because it cant possible now how (should it call, delete, delete[], free?).
Do keep in mind that if you modify/delete one of the elements from vector A (using the pointers on the vector), that element will be modified in vector B (since its a pointer to the same element).
Im not sure what is your intend with this, but if you want to copy the whole vector, you should implement a clone mechanism for the objects and then copy them using transform:
class cloneFunctor {
public:
T* operator() (T* a) {
return a->clone();
}
}
Then just:
void StateInit(vector<CButton*> listBtn)
{
transform(listBtn.begin(), listBtn.end(), back_inserter(_m_pListBtn), cloneFunctor());
};
IF your intention is not to clone it but to share the pointers you should pass the vector as pointer or reference:
void StateInit(const vector<CButton*>& listBtn)
{
_m_pListBtn = listBtn;
};
void StateInit(const vector<CButton*>& listBtn)
. The way it's written now the vector will be copied twice, once tolistBtn
and again to_m_pListBtn
. No point in that.