class String
{
private:
char* ptr;
public:
String(const String& s1)
{
int len = strlen(s1.ptr);
ptr = new char[len+1];
strcpy(ptr,s1.ptr);
}
String(char* c)
{
int len = strlen(c);
ptr = new char[len+1];
strcpy(ptr,c);
}
~String()
{
cout<<"DELETING\n";
delete[] ptr;
}
void display()
{cout<<ptr;}
};
int main()
{
String s("Waqar"); String* s2 =&s;
String s1(s);
delete s2;
s1.display();
It goes fine till the second last line delete s2
. While debugging, it throws an error to the effect of an unknown signal and never executes s1.display()
.
Being a noob, I was testing deep vs shallow copy concepts in c++ and thus written this junk.
Where did I go wrong?
delete
what younew
.s2
was not.new
were with typechar[]
, so you can't usedelete
with typeString
. Your program has undefined behavior, and anything could have happened.