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c++classvariablesmemberdelete-operator

If I delete a class, are its member variables automatically deleted?


I have been researching, and nothing relevant has come up, so I came here.

I am trying to avoid memory leaks, so I am wondering:

Say I have class MyClass with member ints a and b, and an int array c, which are filled in a member function:

class MyClass
{
    public:
        int a, b;
        int c[2];
        void setVariables() 
        {
            a, b = 0;
            for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++) 
            {
                c[i] = 3;
            }
        }
};
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
    MyClass* mc = new MyClass();
    mc->setVariables();
    delete mc;
} 

Now, after I call delete mc, will a, b, and all the contents of c be deleted as well? Or will I have to do that explicitly in the destructor of MyClass?


Solution

  • When delete mc is executed, the compiler calls the destructor of the object (MyClass::~MyClass()) and then deallocates the memory associated with it.

    The default destructor (when you don't declare your own) calls the destructors of all member variables, in order from last to first by declaration (that is, in this case, c, then b, then a). Since those members in this example are POD types (they do not have a destructor), no work is done.