blender/intern/memutil/MEM_SmartPtr.h
Campbell Barton cf6994b910 code cleanup: spelling,
also initialize bmesh-bevel settings struct to zero to avoid possible uninitialized memory later.
2012-11-12 07:33:01 +00:00

242 lines
5.2 KiB
C++

/*
* ***** BEGIN GPL LICENSE BLOCK *****
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*
* The Original Code is Copyright (C) 2001-2002 by NaN Holding BV.
* All rights reserved.
*
* The Original Code is: all of this file.
*
* Contributor(s): none yet.
*
* ***** END GPL LICENSE BLOCK *****
*/
/** \file memutil/MEM_SmartPtr.h
* \ingroup memutil
*/
/**
* @file MEM_SmartPtr.h
* Declaration of MEM_RefCounted and MEM_RefCountable classes.
* @author Laurence
*/
#ifndef __MEM_SMARTPTR_H__
#define __MEM_SMARTPTR_H__
#include <stdlib.h> // for NULL !
/**
* @section MEM_SmartPtr
* This class defines a smart pointer similar to that defined in
* the Standard Template Library but without the painful get()
* semantics to access the internal c style pointer.
*
* It is often useful to explicitly declare ownership of memory
* allocated on the heap within class or function scope. This
* class helps you to encapsulate this ownership within a value
* type. When an instance of this class goes out of scope it
* makes sure that any memory associated with it's internal pointer
* is deleted. It can help to inform users of an aggregate class
* that it owns instances of it's members and these instances
* should not be shared. This is not reliably enforceable in C++
* but this class attempts to make the 1-1 relationship clear.
*
* @section Example usage
*
* class foo {
* ...constructors accessors etc.
* int x[1000];
* }
*
* class bar {
* public :
* static
* bar *
* New(
* ) {
* MEM_SmartPtr<foo> afoo = new foo();
* MEM_SmartPtr<bar> that = new bar();
*
* if (foo == NULL || that == NULL) return NULL;
*
* that->m_foo = afoo.Release();
* return that.Release();
* }
*
* ~bar() {
* // smart ptr takes care of deletion
* }
* private :
* MEM_SmartPtr<foo> m_foo;
* }
*
* You may also safely construct vectors of MEM_SmartPtrs and
* have the vector own stuff you put into it.
*
* e.g.
* {
* std::vector<MEM_SmartPtr<foo> > foo_vector;
* foo_vector.push_back( new foo());
* foo_vector.push_back( new foo());
*
* foo_vector[0]->bla();
* } // foo_vector out of scope => heap memory freed for both foos
*
* @warning this class should only be used for objects created
* on the heap via the new function. It will not behave correctly
* if you pass ptrs to objects created with new[] nor with
* objects declared on the stack. Doing this is likely to crash
* the program or lead to memory leaks.
*/
template
< class T >
class MEM_SmartPtr {
public :
/**
* Construction from reference - this class
* always assumes ownership from the rhs.
*/
MEM_SmartPtr(
const MEM_SmartPtr &rhs
) {
m_val = rhs.Release();
}
/**
* Construction from ptr - this class always
* assumes that it now owns the memory associated with the
* ptr.
*/
MEM_SmartPtr(
T* val
) :
m_val (val)
{
}
/**
* Defalut constructor
*/
MEM_SmartPtr(
) :
m_val (NULL)
{
}
/**
* Type conversion from this class to the type
* of a pointer to the template parameter.
* This means you can pass an instance of this class
* to a function expecting a ptr of type T.
*/
operator T * () const {
return m_val;
}
/**
* Return a reference to the internal ptr class.
* Use with care when you now that the internal ptr
* is not NULL!
*/
T &
Ref(
) const {
return *m_val;
}
/**
* Assignment operator - ownership is transferred from rhs to lhs.
* There is an intenional side-effect of function of transferring
* ownership from the const parameter rhs. This is to insure
* the 1-1 relationship.
* The object associated with this instance is deleted if it
* is not the same as that contained in the rhs.
*/
MEM_SmartPtr & operator=(
const MEM_SmartPtr &rhs
) {
if (this->m_val != rhs.m_val) {
delete this->m_val;
}
this->m_val = rhs.Release();
return *this;
}
/**
* Overload the operator -> so that it's possible to access
* all the normal methods of the internal ptr.
*/
T * operator->() const {
return m_val;
}
/**
* Caller takes ownership of the object - the object will not
* be deleted when the ptr goes out of scope.
*/
T *
Release(
) const {
T* temp = m_val;
(const_cast<MEM_SmartPtr *>(this))->m_val = NULL;
return temp;
}
/**
* Force destruction of the internal object.
*/
void
Delete(
) {
delete (m_val);
m_val = NULL;
}
/**
* Destructor - deletes object if it exists
*/
~MEM_SmartPtr(
) {
delete (m_val);
}
private :
/// The ptr owned by this class.
T * m_val;
};
#endif