I was wondering if there was a pattern for the deletion of pointers. More specifically when you need to call some kind of intermediate function for data. Here is a example of what I was thinking:
int main() {
// some code here
char* return_of_function1 = function1(int_array);
int return_of_function2 = function2(return_of_function1);
delete[] return_of_function1;
// some code here
}
char* function1(int* int_array) {
// some code here
}
int function2(char* char_array) {
// some code here
}
int main() {
// some code here
int return_of_function2 = function2(int_array);
// some code here
}
char* function1(int* int_array) {
// some code here
}
int function2(int* int_array) {
// some code here
return function2(function1(int_array), true);
}
int function2(char* char_array, bool delete_array) {
// some code here
if(delete_array) {
delete[] char_array;
}
return /* return value */;
}
The motivation is to avoid intermediate calls for data on properties of a set. Again, I'm just asking if this is commonly used, or even a good idea to begin with.
Thanks so much.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire