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c++constructorinitialization-order

C++: Construction and initialization order guarantees


I have some doubts about construction and initialization order guarantees in C++. For instance, the following code has four classes X, Y, Z and W. The main function instantiates an object of class X, which contains an object of class Y, and derives from class Z, so both constructors will be called. Additionally, the const char* parameter passed to X's constructor will be implicitly converted to an object of class W, so W's constructor must also be called.

What are the guarantees the C++ standard gives on the order of the calls to the copy constructors? Or, equivalently, what this program is allowed to print?

#include <iostream>

class Z {
   public:
   Z() { std::cout << "Z" << std::endl; }
};

class Y {
   public:
   Y() { std::cout << "Y" << std::endl; }
};

class W {
   public:
   W(const char*) { std::cout << "W" << std::endl; }
};

class X : public Z {
   public:
   X(const W&) { std::cout << "X" << std::endl; }
   private:
   Y y;
};

int main(int, char*[]) {
   X x("x");
   return 0;
}

edit: Is this correct?

   W      |
 /   \    |
Z     Y   |
 \   /    |
   X      V

Solution

  • In all classes construction order is guaranteed: base classes, as specified from left to right followed by member variables in the order declared in the class definition. A class's constructor body is executed once all of its bases' and members' constructions have completed.

    In your example X is derived from Z and contains Y so the Z base object is constructed first, then the Y member y, then the construction of the X completes with the execution of X's constructor body.

    The temporary W is needed to pass to the constructor of X, so it is constructed before the construction of the x begins and will be destroyed once the initialization of x completes.

    So the program must print:

    W
    Z
    Y
    X