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What's the difference between these two statements?

C *c1 = new C;
C *c2 = new C();

The situation is explained here (Michael Burr's answer):

  • new C - default-initializes C, which calls the default ctor.
  • new C() - value-initializes C, which calls the default ctor.

I don't understand the difference. What do the terms "default-initializes" and "value-initializes" mean? Can you give examples?

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  • Ok, but what's the difference between default-initializes and value-initializes as Michael aswerd in the source question?
    – Daros911
    Dec 26, 2020 at 15:44
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    @Daros911 if C is a class/struct type, both syntaxes call its default constructor. But if C is a fundamental type, like int, then new int will leave the value of the int unspecified, but new int() will initialize the value of the int to 0. That is the difference Dec 26, 2020 at 22:48
  • @RemyLebeau It'll also be uninitialized if the class/struct has a trivial constructor. Dec 27, 2020 at 9:46

1 Answer 1

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The difference is when you use objects that are "Trivially Constructible", which means types that don't really have a constructor and neither do its members/base classes (including built-in types like int, double). Let's have a look at an example:

struct Foo
{
    int val1;
    int val2;
};

Here Foo does not have a constructor. When we create an object of type Foo, we can leave its members initialized with indeterminate values. Here's how we do it:

Foo* pf = new Foo;

Here pf->val1 and pf->val2 essentially have some garbage values.
We can also zero-initialize that object like so:

Foo* pf = new Foo();

Here pf->val1 and pf->val2 are initialized with zero. If they had a different type, like a pointer, they would have a different value, like null-pointer.

If the object does have a default constructor, the two examples do exactly the same thing.

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