I understand that in C++ it is best/safer to use smart pointers in order to make sure we never miss freeing/deleting the allocated memory. Now I recently came across the following in a lecture about smart pointers in C++. This is the example:
void test_pointer(void)
{
typedef std::shared_ptr<MyObject> MyObjectPtr;
MyObjectPtr p1; // Empty
{
MyObjectPtr p2(new MyObject());
p1 = p2;
}
}
Now I understand that std:shared_ptr
will be destroyed after the last reference of it is done, ie after we exit the function p1
will be destroyed. But the warning at the end was about a dangling reference, which is what confused me:
MyObjectPtr* pp = new MyObjectPtr(new MyObject());
The Note mentions that if this was declared within the function then it is a dangling reference, which prevents the std::shared_ptr
from ever being deleted. Why is that? We are using smart pointers so we should never end up in this situation?