src/corelib/tools/qscopedpointer.cpp
author Alex Gilkes <alex.gilkes@nokia.com>
Mon, 11 Jan 2010 14:00:40 +0000
changeset 0 1918ee327afb
child 3 41300fa6a67c
permissions -rw-r--r--
Revision: 200952

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#include "qscopedpointer.h"

QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE

/*!
    \class QScopedPointer
    \brief The QScopedPointer class stores a pointer to a dynamically allocated object, and deletes it upon destruction.
    \since 4.6
    \reentrant
    \ingroup misc

    Managing heap allocated objects manually is hard and error prone, with the
    common result that code leaks memory and is hard to maintain.
    QScopedPointer is a small utility class that heavily simplifies this by
    assigning stack-based memory ownership to heap allocations, more generally
    called resource acquisition is initialization(RAII).

    QScopedPointer guarantees that the object pointed to will get deleted when
    the current scope dissapears.

    Consider this function which does heap allocations, and have various exit points:

    \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qscopedpointer.cpp 0

    It's encumbered by the manual delete calls. With QScopedPointer, the code
    can be simplified to:

    \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qscopedpointer.cpp 1

    The code the compiler generates for QScopedPointer is the same as when
    writing it manually. Code that makes use of \a delete are candidates for
    QScopedPointer usage (and if not, possibly another type of smart pointer
    such as QSharedPointer). QScopedPointer intentionally has no copy
    constructor or assignment operator, such that ownership and lifetime is
    clearly communicated.

    The const qualification on a regular C++ pointer can also be expressed with
    a QScopedPointer:

    \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qscopedpointer.cpp 2

    \section1 Custom cleanup handlers

    Arrays as well as pointers that have been allocated with \c malloc must
    not be deleted using \c delete. QScopedPointer's second template parameter
    can be used for custom cleanup handlers.

    The following custom cleanup handlers exist:

    \list
    \i QScopedPointerDeleter - the default, deletes the pointer using \c delete
    \i QScopedPointerArrayDeleter - deletes the pointer using \c{delete []}. Use
       this handler for pointers that were allocated with \c{new []}.
    \i QScopedPointerPodDeleter - deletes the pointer using \c{free()}. Use this
       handler for pointers that were allocated with \c{malloc()}.
    \endlist

    You can pass your own classes as handlers, provided that they have a public
    static function \c{void cleanup(T *pointer)}.

    \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qscopedpointer.cpp 5

    \section1 Forward Declared Pointers

    Classes that are forward declared can be used within QScopedPointer, as
    long as the destructor of the forward declared class is available whenever
    a QScopedPointer needs to clean up.

    Concretely, this means that all classes containing a QScopedPointer that
    points to a forward declared class must have non-inline constructors,
    destructors and assignment operators:

    \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qscopedpointer.cpp 4

    Otherwise, the compiler output a warning about not being able to destruct
    \c MyPrivateClass.

    \sa QSharedPointer
*/

/*! \typedef QScopedPointer::pointer
  \internal
 */

/*!
    \fn QScopedPointer::QScopedPointer(T *p = 0)

    Constructs this QScopedPointer instance and sets its pointer to \a p.
*/

/*!
    \fn QScopedPointer::~QScopedPointer()

    Destroys this QScopedPointer object. Delete the object its pointer points
    to.
*/

/*!
    \fn T *QScopedPointer::data() const

    Returns the value of the pointer referenced by this object. QScopedPointer
    still owns the object pointed to.
*/

/*!
    \fn T &QScopedPointer::operator*() const

    Provides access to the scoped pointer's object.

    If the contained pointer is \c null, behavior is undefined.
    \sa isNull()
*/

/*!
    \fn T *QScopedPointer::operator->() const

    Provides access to the scoped pointer's object.

    If the contained pointer is \c null, behavior is undefined.

    \sa isNull()
*/

/*!
    \fn QScopedPointer::operator bool() const

    Returns \c true if this object is not \c null. This function is suitable
    for use in \tt if-constructs, like:

    \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_corelib_tools_qscopedpointer.cpp 3

    \sa isNull()
*/

/*!
    \fn bool QScopedPointer::operator==(const QScopedPointer<T, Cleanup> &other) const

    Equality operator. Returns true if the scoped pointer \a other
    is pointing to the same object as this pointer, otherwise returns false.
*/


/*!
    \fn bool QScopedPointer::operator!=(const QScopedPointer<T, Cleanup> &other) const

    Inequality operator. Returns true if the scoped pointer \a other
    is not pointing to the same object as this pointer, otherwise returns false.
*/

/*!
    \fn bool QScopedPointer::isNull() const

    Returns \c true if this object is holding a pointer that is \c null.
*/

/*!
    \fn void QScopedPointer::reset(T *other = 0)

    Deletes the existing object it is pointing to if any, and sets its pointer to
    \a other. QScopedPointer now owns \a other and will delete it in its
    destructor.
*/

/*!
    \fn T *QScopedPointer::take()

    Returns the value of the pointer referenced by this object. The pointer of this
    QScopedPointer object will be reset to \c null.

    Callers of this function take ownership of the pointer.
*/

/*! \fn bool QScopedPointer::operator!() const

    Returns \c true if the pointer referenced by this object is \c null, otherwise
    returns \c false.

    \sa isNull()
*/

/*! \fn void QScopedPointer::swap(QScopedPointer<T, Cleanup> &other)
  Swap this pointer with \a other.
 */

QT_END_NAMESPACE