When should delete be called on a gcnew allocated object?
I was reading the following MSKB example and they perform a delete on a managed object.
I was under the impression you should never delete a garbaged collected object rather you must leave that to garbage collector.
What have I missed?
Method 4
开发者_开发技巧//#include <msclr/marshal.h>
//using namespace msclr::interop;
marshal_context ^ context = gcnew marshal_context();
const char* str4 = context->marshal_as<const char*>(str);
puts(str4);
delete context;
delete
in C++/CLI merely calls the Dispose
method on a managed object, if it implements the System::IDisposable
interface – if it doesn't, it's effectively a noop. In fact, if you try to call the Dispose
method on a managed object yourself, you'll get a compiler error – delete
is the enforced idiom for disposing an object.
To be clear, it has nothing to do with memory management, noting of course that most finalizable objects will get GCed sooner if they're disposed.
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