I got a set that includes pointers to an allocated memory, I am using the clear method forexample : setname.clear();
and the set itself is getting cleared and his p
std::set's clear() method does remove elements from the set. However, in your case set contains pointers that are being removed, but the memory they point to is not released. You have to do it manually before the call to clear()
, for example:
struct Deleter
{
template <typename T>
void operator () (T *ptr)
{
delete ptr;
}
};
for_each (myset.begin (), myset.end (), Deleter());
There is a library in Boost called Pointer Container that solves this problem.
Clear()
only removes the pointers not the object it points to. You'll have either to iterate on each object before removing it to delete
it, or use something like std::tr1::shared_ptr
(also in Boost).
Set only clears what it allocates itself. If you allocate something yourself, you'll have to clear it yourself.