Creating a class object in c++
1) What is the difference between both the way of creating class objects.
a) pointer
Example* example=new Example();
// you get a pointer, and when you finish it use, you have to delete it:
delete example;
b) Simple declaration
Example example;
you get a variable, not a pointer, and it will be destroyed out of scope it was declared.
2) Singleton C++
This SO question may helps you
I can use the same in c++ like this [...] Where constructor is compulsory. From this tutorial I got that we can create object like this [...] Which do not require an constructor.
This is wrong. A constructor must exist in order to create an object. The constructor could be defined implicitly by the compiler under some conditions if you do not provide any, but eventually the constructor must be there if you want an object to be instantiated. In fact, the lifetime of an object is defined to begin when the constructor routine returns.
From Paragraph 3.8/1 of the C++11 Standard:
[...] The lifetime of an object of type T begins when:
— storage with the proper alignment and size for type T is obtained, and
— if the object has non-trivial initialization, its initialization is complete.
Therefore, a constructor must be present.
1) What is the difference between both the way of creating class objects.
When you instantiate object with automatic storage duration, like this (where X
is some class):
X x;
You are creating an object which will be automatically destroyed when it goes out of scope. On the other hand, when you do:
X* x = new X();
You are creating an object dynamically and you are binding its address to a pointer. This way, the object you created will not be destroyed when your x
pointer goes out of scope.
In Modern C++, this is regarded as a dubious programming practice: although pointers are important because they allow realizing reference semantics, raw pointers are bad because they could result in memory leaks (objects outliving all of their pointers and never getting destroyed) or in dangling pointers (pointers outliving the object they point to, potentially causing Undefined Behavior when dereferenced).
In fact, when creating an object with new
, you always have to remember destroying it with delete
:
delete x;
If you need reference semantics and are forced to use pointers, in C++11 you should consider using smart pointers instead:
std::shared_ptr<X> x = std::make_shared<X>();
Smart pointers take care of memory management issues, which is what gives you headache with raw pointers. Smart pointers are, in fact, almost the same as Java or C# object references. The "almost" is necessary because the programmer must take care of not introducing cyclic dependencies through owning smart pointers.
2) If i am creating object like Example example; how to use that in an singleton class.
You could do something like this (simplified code):
struct Example
{
static Example& instance()
{
static Example example;
return example;
}
private:
Example() { }
Example(Example const&) = delete;
Example(Example&&) = delete;
Example& operator = (Example const&) = delete;
Example& operator = (Example&&) = delete;
};
There is two ways to make/create object in c++.
First one is :
MyClass myclass; // if you don;t need to call rather than default constructor
MyClass myclass(12); // if you need to call constructor with parameters
Second one is :
MyClass *myclass = new MyClass();// if you don;t need to call rather than default constructor
MyClass *myclass = new MyClass(12);// if you need to call constructor with parameters
In c++ if you use new keyword, object will be stored in heap. it;s very useful if you are using this object long time of period and if you use first method, it will be stored in stack. it can be used only short time period. Notice : if you use new keyword, remember it will return pointer value. you should declare name with *. If you use second method, it doesn;t delete object in the heap. you must delete by yourself using delete keyword;
delete myclass;
Example example;
This is a declaration of a variable named example
of type Example
. This will default-initialize the object which involves calling its default constructor. The object will have automatic storage duration which means that it will be destroyed when it goes out of scope.
Example* example;
This is a declaration of a variable named example
which is a pointer to an Example
. In this case, default-initialization leaves it uninitialized - the pointer is pointing nowhere in particular. There is no Example
object here. The pointer object has automatic storage duration.
Example* example = new Example();
This is a declaration of a variable named example
which is a pointer to an Example
. This pointer object, as above, has automatic storage duration. It is then initialized with the result of new Example();
. This new
expression creates an Example
object with dynamic storage duration and then returns a pointer to it. So the example
pointer is now pointing to that dynamically allocated object. The Example
object is value-initialized which will call a user-provided constructor if there is one or otherwise initialise all members to 0.
Example* example = new Example;
This is similar to the previous line. The difference is that the Example
object is default-initialized, which will call the default constructor of Example
(or leave it uninitialized if it is not of class type).
A dynamically allocated object must be delete
d (probably with delete example;
).