As an example say I have a class foo that does not have a default constructor but one that looks like this
foo:foo(int _varA,int _varB)
{
   m_VarA = _varA;
   m_VarB = _varB;
}
How would I allocate an array of these.
I seem to remember trying somthing like this unsuccessfully.
foo* MyArray = new foo[100](25,14).
I don't think this will work either.
foo* MyArray = new foo[100](25,14)
Can this be done? I typically do this by writing the default constructor using some preset values for _varA and _varB. Then adding a function to reset _varA and _varB for each element but that will not开发者_运维百科 work for this case.
Thanks for the help.
Your first choice should be to ignore the fact that new[] even exists, and use an std::vector instead:
std::vector<foo> MyArray(100, foo(25,14));
If you are to be able to allocate an array of a class (directly, using new[]), the class must have a default constructor.  No default constructor, no dynamic arrays.
 
         
                                         
                                         
                                         
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