FIX: /Od May Generate Destructor for Unconstructed Temp ObjectLast reviewed: December 18, 1997Article ID: Q168010 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSThe destructor for a class may be called for an unconstructed temporary when used with the conditional operator.
RESOLUTIONUse an if-else construct in lieu of the conditional operator. In most cases, the logical not operator can be applied to the first operand while reversing the second and third operands.
STATUSMicrosoft has confirmed this to be a bug in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article. This bug has been corrected in Visual Studio 97 Service Pack 1. For additional information about the Visual Studio 97 Service Pack 1, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q170365 TITLE : INFO: Visual Studio 97 Service Packs - What, Where, and Why MORE INFORMATIONAssuming a class C and a type T, the following conditions must be true of the ternary expression for this bug to occur:
Sample Code
typedef int T; class C { T _i; public: C(const C& c); C(T); ~C(); operator T(); }; void f(T i) { C c1(5); C c2 = i==0 ? c1 : i; //i ? i : c1; // possible workaround }NOTE: MFC's CString class exhibits this behavior. Keywords : VS97FixlistSP3 VS97FixlistSP2 VS97FixlistSP1 Version : 5.0 Platform : NT WINDOWS Issue type : kbbug Solution Type : kbfix kbservicepack |
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