I been working in a new project but I encounter with a problem which I can't see why fail.
When I perfom this line delete textY give me the error _Block_Type_Is_Valid (pHead->nBlockUse). So what am I doing wrong?
This is the source code:
Text.h
#ifndef TEXT_H
#define TEXT_H
typedef boost::shared_ptr<Font> FontPtr;
class Text
{
public:
Text(FontPtr font, char *text)
{
str = new char[35];
this->font = font; str = text;
}
Text(const Text& cSource);
Text& operator=(const Text& cSource);
~Text();
.
.
.
.
private:
FontPtr font;
char *str;
GLuint texture;
GLfloat pos_x, pos_y, width, height;
};
#endif
Text.cpp
Text::Text(const Text& cSource)
{
font = cSource.font;
texture = cSource.texture;
pos_x = cSource.pos_x;
pos_y = cSource.pos_y;
width = cSource.width;
height = cSource.height;
int sizeString = 35;
if (cSource.str)
{
str = new char[sizeString];
strncpy(str, cSource.str, sizeString);
}
else
{
str = 0;
}
}
Text& Text::operator=(const Text& cSource)
{
delete[] str;
font = cSource.font;
texture = cSource.texture;
pos_x = cSource.pos_x;
pos_y = cSource.pos_y;
width = cSource.width;
height = cSource.height;
int sizeString = 35;
if (cSource.str)
{
str = new char[sizeString];
strncpy(str, cSource.str, sizeString);
}
else
{
str = 0;
}
return *this;
}
Text::~Text()
{
delete[] str;
}
Font.h
#ifndef FONT_H
#define FONT_H
class Font
{
public:
Font(TTF_Font *font, SDL_Color color)
{
this->font = font; this->color = color;
}
~Font();
.
.
.
private:
TTF_Font *font;
SDL_Color color;
};
#endif
Font.cpp
Font::~Font()
{
TTF_CloseFont(font);
}
CGameApplication.cpp
.
.
.
.
void CGameApplication::initializeApplicationFonts()
{
TTF_Font* font;
SDL_Color color;
font = TTF_OpenFont("test.ttf", 15);
color.r = color.g = color.b = 255;
GApp->addFont(font, color);
Text *text = new Text(GApp->getFonts().at(0), " ");
text->setTexture( CTextM->textToGLTexture(GApp->getFonts().at(0), text) );
text->setPosX(20); text->setPosY(20);
GApp->addText(new Text(*text));
Text *textY = new Text(GApp->getFonts().at(0), " ");
textY->setTexture( CTextM->textToGLTexture(GApp->getFonts().at(0), textY) );
textY->setPosX(80); textY->setPosY(20);
GApp->addText(new Text(*textY));
delete textY; //-----> This line crashes the program with that error
}
.
.
.
GameApp.h
#ifndef GAMEAPP_H
#define GAMEAPP_H
class GameApp
{
public:
GameApp(){
}
//~GameApp();
void addFont(TTF_Font *font, SDL_Color color) {
vFonts.push_back(FontPtr( new Font(font, color) ) ); }
vector<FontPtr> getFonts() { return vFonts; }
void addText(Text *text) {
vTexts.push_back(new Text(*text));}
private:
SDL_Surface *gameMainSurface;
vector<Image*> vImages;
std::vector<FontPtr> vFonts;
vector<Text*> vTexts;
vector<Tile*> vTiles;
Map *currentMap;
};
#endif
So I think the problem is that when I destroy the object textY, the pointer to the TTF_Font is destroyed. But I'm not sure because when I add a object Text in the vector I use a copy-constructor so the different pointers got copy without problems.
Just use a std::string. That error means that you double deleted something, or something like that, a problem that you wouldn't have if you didn't manage your own memory. Your code is littered with memory leaks and other bugs that you won't have with std::string.
From what I can see, the error has to do with the default ctor for Text. You take in a char* pointer, allocate space for the string, but don't actually copy the text into str, but simply assign the pointer! You do it correct in the copy ctor though. Now, consider this example:
class Foo{
public:
Foo(char* text){
str = text;
}
~Foo(){
delete str;
}
private:
char* str;
};
int main(){
Foo f("hi");
}
C++03 (for backwards compatability...) allows literal strings ("hi") to bind to non-const char* pointers, as seen in this code. C++11 thankfully fixed that and this should actually no longer compile. Now, deleting a literal string obviously doesn't work, as the string is placed in the read-only section of the .exe and as such isn't deleteable. I guess this is where your error comes from, if you instantiate a Text object from a literal string.
Note that this also happens if you create it from a char[] created on the stack:
char text[] = "hi";
Foo f(text);
as the Foo will now try to delete a stack-object.
Another case where this might happen is if you double-delete an object:
char* text = new char[3];
Foo f(text);
delete text;
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