I'm just looking at the following code snippet:
#include<iostream>
#include<cstring>
using namespace std;
class String
{
private:
char *s;
int size;
public:
String(const char *str = NULL); // constructor
~String() { delete [] s; }// destructor
void print() { cout << s << endl; }
void change(const char *); // Function to change
};
String::String(const char *str)
{
size = strlen(str);
s = new char[size+1];
strcpy(s, str);
}
void String::change(const char *str)
{
delete [] s;
size = strlen(str);
s = s + 1;
s = new char[size+1];
strcpy(s, str);
}
int main()
{
String str1("StackOverFlow");
String str2 = str1;
str1.print();
str2.print();
str2.change("StackOverFlowChanged");
str1.print();
str2.print();
return 0;
}
I expect the output as: StackOverflow, StackOverflow, StackOverflow, StackOverflowChanged.
Before str2.change("StackOverFlowChanged") line, both str1 and str2's s point to the same memory location. However, in change method, since the pointer value changed, I except now str1 and str2's s point to the different locations and this is not the case. Can somebody explain why this is the case?