I really can't believe I couldn't find a clear answer to this...
How do you free the memory allocated after a C++ class constructor throws an exception, in the case where it's initialised using the new
operator. E.g.:
class Blah
{
public:
Blah()
{
throw "oops";
}
};
void main()
{
Blah* b = NULL;
try
{
b = new Blah();
}
catch (...)
{
// What now?
}
}
When I tried this out, b
is NULL in the catch block (which makes sense).
When debugging, I noticed that the conrol enters the memory allocation routine BEFORE it hits the constructor.
This on the MSDN website seems to confirm this:
When new is used to allocate memory
for a C++ class object, the object's
constructor is called after the memory
is allocated.
So, bearing in mind that the local variable b
is never assigned (i.e. is NULL in the catch block) how do you delete the allocated memory?
It would also be nice to get a cross platform answer on this. i.e., what does the C++ spec say?
CLARIFICATION: I'm not talking about the case where the class has allocated memory itself in the c'tor and then throws. I appreciate that in those cases the d'tor won't be called. I'm talking about the memory used to allocate THE object (Blah
in my case).
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