I'm new to C++ and try to understand how to create and use a class in C++. For this I have the following code:
class MyClass
{
public:
MyClass()
{
_num = 0;
_name = "";
}
MyClass(MyClass* pMyClass)
{
_num = pMyClass->_num;
_name = pMyClass->_name;
}
void PrintValues() { std::cout << _name << ":" << _num << std::endl; }
void SetValues(int number, std::string name)
{
_num = number;
_name = name;
}
private:
int _num;
std::string _name;
};
int main()
{
std::vector<MyClass*> myClassArray;
MyClass myLocalObject = new MyClass();
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++)
{
myLocalObject.SetValues(i, "test");
myClassArray.push_back(new MyClass(myLocalObject));
}
myClassArray[1]->PrintValues();
// use myClassArray further
}
I get a similar example from the internet and try to understand it. My intentions is to populate myClassArray with new class objects. If I compile the code above using VisualStudio 2022 I get no errors, but I'm not sure it doesn't produce memory leaks or if there is a faster and simple approach.
Especially I do not understand the following line: MyClass myLocalObject = new MyClass();
myLocalObject is created on the stack but is initialized with a heap value (because of the new). If new operator is used where should delete must apply?
Thank you for any suggestions!