For this program
#include <iostream>
using std::cout;
struct C
{
C() { cout << "Default C called!\n"; }
C(const C &rhs) { cout << "CC called!\n"; }
};
const C f()
{
cout << "Entered f()!\n";
return C();
}
int main()
{
C a = f();
C b = a;
return 0;
}
the output I get is:
Entered f()!
Default C called!
CC called!
Since f()
is returning by value, it should return a temporary. As T a = x;
is T a(x);
, wouldn't it call the copy constructor for the construction of a
, with the temporary passed-in as its argument?
In C++, a Copy Constructor may be called for the following cases: 1) When an object of the class is returned by value. 2) When an object of the class is passed (to a function) by value as an argument. 3) When an object is constructed based on another object of the same class.
Constructor: It is a method which has the same name as the class which is used to create an instance of the class. Copy Constructor: Used to create an object by copying variables from another object of the same class.
From a purely object-oriented perspective, "copy semantics" is the right way to preserve control over object ownership. Once an assignment is made, both source and destination can be altered without impacting each other.
Since
f()
is returning by value, it should return a temporary. AsT a = x;
isT a(x);
, wouldn't it call the copy constructor for the construction ofa
, with the temporary passed-in as its argument?
Look up Return Value Optimization. This is turned on by default. If you are on Windows using MSVC 2005+ you can use /Od
to turn this off and get the desired result (or -fno-elide-constructors
on GCC). Also, for MSVC see this article.
12.8 Copying class objects
15 When certain criteria are met, an implementation is allowed to omit the copy construction of a class object, even if the copy constructor and/or destructor for the object have side effects. In such cases, the implementation treats the source and target of the omitted copy operation as simply two different ways of referring to the same object, and the destruction of that object occurs at the later of the times when the two objects would have been destroyed without the optimization.115 This elision of copy operations is permitted in the following circumstances (which may be combined to eliminate multiple copies):
— in a return statement in a function with a class return type, when the expression is the name of a non-volatile automatic object with the same cv-unqualified type as the function return type, the copy operation can be omitted by constructing the automatic object directly into the function’s return value — in a throw-expression, when the operand is the name of a non-volatile automatic object, the copy operation from the operand to the exception object (15.1) can be omitted by constructing the automatic object directly into the exception object
— when a temporary class object that has not been bound to a reference (12.2) would be copied to a class object with the same cv-unqualified type, the copy operation can be omitted by constructing the temporary object directly into the target of the omitted copy
— when the exception-declaration of an exception handler (Clause 15) declares an object of the same type (except for cv-qualification) as the exception object (15.1), the copy operation can be omitted by treating the exception-declaration as an alias for the exception object if the meaning of the program will be unchanged except for the execution of constructors and destructors for the object declared by the exception-declaration.
Note: Emphasis mine
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