Questions tagged [dangling-pointer]

Dangling pointers and wild pointers in computer programming are pointers that do not point to a valid object of the appropriate type.

dangling-pointer
Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
1 vote
1 answer
2k views

How to run Valgrind and other tools to check memory leaks in Visual studio code?

I have installed "Valgrind Task Integration" extension in Visual studio code and after restarting VS code and typed the following Valgrind command in terminal, "valgrind --leak-check=...
Stackyquest's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
96 views

Shouldn't this give me dangling reference errors? [duplicate]

I'm returning to C++ after about a decade of other programming languages so bear with me here. The following program compiles for me in a C++20 project in CLion: #include <iostream> using ...
Jason's user avatar
  • 2,738
-2 votes
2 answers
118 views

Dangling pointer issue C++

I'm making a game engine and I have run into a problem with destroying elements. For example I have some cameras that follow and look at an target (a gameobject or an actor). Later in the game the ...
Fewnity's user avatar
  • 11
0 votes
1 answer
32 views

OLECHAR used as pointer - will it dangling pointer if not nullptr? Function CoTaskMemFree()

I generate a GUID and then save it in OLECHAR* with StringFromCLSID(). If I create a function which returns an OLECHAR and not nullptr the OLECHAR after using CoTaskMemFree() - will it cause dangling ...
Samuil Dimitrov's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
48 views

question on properly managing reference members in a local class in C++

Is the reason why I got a garbage value because of the following or am I wrong? the Other object o passed as an argument to the Inner constructor, goes out of scope after the Inner object has been ...
Sami's user avatar
  • 659
0 votes
1 answer
51 views

Does the following program contain a dangling reference?

I have the following program: #include <iostream> #include <string> using namespace std; using int_arr = int[3]; int& f(int_arr& arr, int index) { return arr[index]; } int ...
ktqq99's user avatar
  • 25
0 votes
1 answer
167 views

How to look for dangling pointers?

I'm trying to build a class for a linked list in C++. My professor says that I have a dangling pointer in my code. I've spent hours looking for it but I just can't find it no matter what. I tried ...
Horsio's user avatar
  • 3
3 votes
1 answer
107 views

Coroutines: Do co_yielded string_views dangle?

I want to mix up the co_yielding string literals and std::strings Generator<std::string_view> range(int first, const int last) { while (first < last) { char ch = first++; ...
Tom Huntington's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
39 views

Will there be dangling references to map values if it gets resized? [duplicate]

Would reference to values in std::map or std::unordered_map be valid/maintained if the map's being inserted new elements or removed from? For example, is the below code safe? Or would there be ...
Xero's user avatar
  • 23
4 votes
2 answers
301 views

prevent initializing std::optional<std::reference_wrapper<const T>> with rvalue std::optional<T>

std::reference_wrapper cannot be bound to rvalue reference to prevent dangling pointer. However, with combination of std::optional, it seems that rvalue could be bound. That is, std::...
slyx's user avatar
  • 2,155
1 vote
1 answer
301 views

Return a shared pointer from a function vs Capturing a shared pointer in a Lambda

I am constructing a shared pointer in a function_1 and giving it as a capture to a lambda. I think this is an issue, could you please confirm if this safe or I am right and I shoudn't be doing this? #...
Vero's user avatar
  • 301
-1 votes
1 answer
94 views

Why doesn't GCC warn me about storing a reference to a local variable?

Suppose I'm compiling the following code: struct foo { const int& x_; foo(const int x) : x_(x) { } }; int main() { int x = 1; auto b2 = foo{x}; return b2.x_; } This program ...
einpoklum's user avatar
  • 124k
0 votes
1 answer
323 views

Why we initialize the next pointer of Linked List as NULL before deletion

Why we initialize the next pointer of Linked List as NULL before deletion we move our head to the next node during deletion and we free the memory of the first node, so why we need to initialize the ...
user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
81 views

bugged const_iterator& operator++() for red-black tree

I'm new to c++ and I face some problems implementing the iterator on the template class Tree (structure of the code includes the canonical classes (Node,Tree,Iterator). Fwd iterator is not working ...
mpv's user avatar
  • 1
0 votes
2 answers
37 views

Storing address of local var via passing a double ptr to function does not cause a seg fault but returning address of that var causes seg fault. Why? [duplicate]

I understand the concept of dangling pointers, func2 returns address of deallocated memory. In func1 instead of returning the address we store by passing a double pointer. Isn't this also a case of ...
Manan Chawla's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
248 views

Is it unsafe to co_yield a pointer to a local coroutine variable?

It's common knowledge that returning a pointer to a stack variable is generally a bad idea: int* foo() { int i = 0; return &i; } int main() { int* p = foo(); } In the example above, my ...
user118534's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
71 views

What is the exact cause of undefined behaviour in this piece of code involving shared_ptr's and lambda ref capture?

I found this piece of code at https://alexgaynor.net/2019/apr/21/modern-c++-wont-save-us/. The author says that in main x goes out of scope, destroying the last reference to the data, and causing it ...
Attila Szasz's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
229 views

how to monitor dangling pointers that points to leakded memory?

lets think we have a code like this : int * ptr = new int; int *nptr = ptr int * ptr2 = new int; int *nptr2 = 2*nptr+ptr2; delete ptr; delete ptr2; ptr = NULL; ptr2 = NULL; So now the nptr ...
esmaeil.zivari's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
209 views

Why ptr not becomes Dangling pointer because when return pointer who store the address of local variable get destroy after return function?

#include<stdio.h> int *func(int * ptr){ int a = 12; int *c = &a; return c; // here it returns the pointer by storing the address of local variable } int main() { int *...
anonymous's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
403 views

Dangling reference solution

T&& operator[](std::size_t n) && noexcept {std::cout<<"move"<<std::endl; return std::move(vec[n]); } I cannot get the expected result in this part. I predict a ...
gahhu's user avatar
  • 31
-1 votes
2 answers
51 views

What is the effect of calling a virtual method by a base class pointer bound to a derived object that has been deleted

The fllowing questions are: p->test() should not work after b is destroyed. However, the code is running without any issue, the dynamic binding still works; when the destructor of A is defined, ...
Changhe Li's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
1k views

C++ Dangling pointer issue

I am using the Raylib GUI framework for a project that displays all the nodes within an iteration of the Collatz Conjecture. In my program, I have a class for a Node object that acts simply as a ...
TheAngriestCrusader's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
213 views

dangling reference in nested vector when parent container reallocates

thing contains 2 vectors, one of foo and one of bar. The bar instances contain references to the foos - the potentially dangling ones. The foo vector is filled precisely once, in things's constructor ...
Oliver Schönrock's user avatar
0 votes
4 answers
361 views

Why is the pointer not free and doesn't it bring me same value of a variable? [duplicate]

In the below code I free the pointer ptr but still *ptr retuns me the same value. If I free the variable then it should give me some garbage value but it didn't. #include <stdio.h> #include<...
user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
143 views

I don't understand why I have a dangling pointer [duplicate]

I have written this method: std::string Utils::GetFileContents(const char* filePath) { std::ifstream in(filePath, std::ios::binary); if (in) { std::string contents; in....
Valentin Popescu's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
59 views

How to return Derived from a function as a reference to Base?

I want to implement a function which returns a reference to Base which actually comprises Derived (types are polymorphic). Something among the lines of the following (incorrect) code: struct Base { ...
Zhiltsoff Igor's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
654 views

C++ How to debug a dangling pointer in production

Basically the situation is we have a C++ program that occasionally crashes when it attempts to access an already-freed object (in Debug build we notice that the memory being pointed to is full of the ...
Dan's user avatar
  • 261
0 votes
2 answers
74 views

Why does the creation of a reference when assigning REQUIRE garbage collection?

Our lecturer in C++ made the following statement: Whenever a scope of some variable ends, the compiler checks whether this variable was an object itself or a reference to it, thus deciding whether to ...
Zhiltsoff Igor's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
280 views

Can dangling pointer be equal to valid pointer during constant evaluation in C++?

During constant expression evaluation in C++17, shall the compiler consider any pointer addressing a valid object unequal to any pointer addressing an object after the end of its lifetime? For example:...
Fedor's user avatar
  • 18.2k
11 votes
3 answers
818 views

Is checking the value of a dangling pointer safe or Undefined Behavior? [duplicate]

We can only de-reference a valid pointer and we can only check the address that a dangling built-in pointer points to. We cannot access its value (the value in the address of object it is pointing to)....
Itachi Uchiwa's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
42 views

why const ref of string in the program is still valid?

in below program a string cstis created inside the block scope and store its const reference in unique_ptr<Def> d(unique_ptr<Def> d is outside block scope). as per my understanding when ...
CY5's user avatar
  • 1,552
1 vote
1 answer
96 views

Is it possible to extract a struct containing fields that are unique/shared pointers from a set

so essentially I have a set of instances of struct A. I want to extract an instance, modify the fields. One of the fields is a unique ptr. I'm not that great at reading c++ errors, it looks like the ...
cheeseburgereddy's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
279 views

why is this dangling pointer in C?

why ptr is dangling pointer. I know "ch" is out of scope, but address of ch is still valid out of inner block. And when I print *ptr I get correct value i.e. 5. void main() { int *ptr; ...
Ravi's user avatar
  • 173
0 votes
3 answers
216 views

Printing Dangling Pointers in C

#include <stdio.h> int main() { int *ptr; { int x = 2; ptr = &x; } printf("%x %d", ptr, *ptr); return 0; } Output: address of x, value of x. ...
INDHUJA G's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
573 views

Why doesn't this create a dangling reference?

I'd think that the VS2019 suggestion would create a dangling reference situation, but I tested it out, and it seems to work. What is happening here? template<typename MessageType> class ...
ratiotile's user avatar
  • 963
0 votes
1 answer
70 views

How to have valid references to objects owned by containers that dynamically move their objects?

If you have a pointer or reference to an object contained in a container, say a dynamic array or a hash table/map, there's the problem that the objects don't permanently stay there, and so it seems ...
Zebrafish's user avatar
  • 12.4k
0 votes
3 answers
254 views

Question related to std::string object and c_str() method in 3 different implementations

I saw a strange behavior the other day. So I wanted to store lines(present in a vector) in a char array and wanted to use '\n' as delimiter. I know c_str() method in string class returns a pointer to ...
Priyanshu Tirkey's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
190 views

Is this a dangling pointer?

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int x[3] = {1, 2, 3}; //create an array x int *y = x; //create pointer y and let it point to the array x *y = null; //now x points to the null, ...
Ali Kılıç's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
422 views

Creating a factory function in Rust

I'm just starting out learning Rust, and I've hit a bit of a roadblock; I'm trying to create a function that initialises the rusty_v8 library. They've given the following code get set up with: use ...
J-Cake's user avatar
  • 1,558
0 votes
2 answers
1k views

Dangling pointers in C

When a pointer is allocated memory using malloc, pointer (say x)will now point to memory address. Later I free this(x) memory pointer,but pointer is still pointing to it's old memory. This would now ...
bbcbbc1's user avatar
  • 95
-1 votes
1 answer
56 views

Returning the address of a local variable and dynamically created variable

Code 1: int *g(){ int *p; p=(int *)malloc(sizeof(int)); *p=10; return p; } Code 2: int *g(){ int p=10; return &p; } OUTPUTS: Code 2 ----> [Warning] function returns ...
sukhbir1996's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
290 views

Is it UB to return a pointer to local variable?

Yes, I know perfectly well you should not do that. If we have this code: int *foo() { int a = 42; return &a; } As most C coders know, this is undefined behavior: Using pointer after free()...
klutt's user avatar
  • 30.8k
1 vote
0 answers
2k views

Does this C++ code acutally have a dangling pointer?

I have class B, which contains a pointer for object of class A. I want them to share their position, so I used std::shared_ptr for it. Below is a short version of this code: struct A { std::...
Kitsune's user avatar
  • 11
0 votes
3 answers
276 views

Error (Segmentation Fault) while reusing a dangling or null pointer

#include<stdlib.h> #include<string.h> int main ( void ) { char *title=NULL; title = (char *) malloc(15); strcpy(title, "C Programming"); printf("String = %c", *...
Sumit Velaskar's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
38 views

How do I create a new instance containing reference field in Rust? [duplicate]

I'm writing an application that communicates with a database. I thought the new method in the Repository would initialize the struct member conn to the reference of MysqlConnection::establish(...) in ...
Simon Park's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
58 views

Why one method of reading string in C using char* pointer works while other doesn't?

I am reading a string in C using the pointers, through the following two methods, both are exactly same(at least they appear to me). The only difference is in one method I have made a dedicated ...
deadLock's user avatar
  • 390
0 votes
2 answers
134 views

C gmtime() Variable scope

I have been working with C and I thought that a pointer should not point to a local variable, but the library holds a function gmtime(), which seems to return a pointer to a variable created inside ...
William Rantis's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
69 views

Failed implementation of a Linked List in C

I do not understand why this program is not working and the elements were not inserted into the List as intended. Every time, when I am debugging, I see that when I go to the main method after the '...
ib2000's user avatar
  • 43
1 vote
1 answer
807 views

How to avoid pointing to deallocated memory (dangling pointers) in classes with pointer members

When an object has a pointer member, the pointer may point to the part of memory that is not owned by the object. Thus, it may be deallocated without informing the object and cause a dangling pointer (...
nmnm's user avatar
  • 47
0 votes
1 answer
321 views

C++ : unallocated pointer to object can be repeatedly safely dereferenced... why?

why is this code practically reliably working, is not unstable, undefined? it's dereferencing unallocated, dangling pointers to objects. thanks. #include <iostream> using namespace std; class ...
Petr's user avatar
  • 21