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Home/ Questions/Q 8160209
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T18:09:52+00:00 2026-06-06T18:09:52+00:00

class test { public: int data; test(int var = 0):data(var){cout<<constructor<<endl;} ~test(){ cout<<destructor<<endl; } test(const

  • 0
class test
{

public:

    int data;
    test(int var = 0):data(var){cout<<"constructor"<<endl;}
    ~test(){ cout<<"destructor"<<endl; }

    test(const test& var)
    {
        cout<<"copy constructor"<<endl;
        this->data = var.data;

    }
    test& operator=( const test& var)
    {
        cout<<"assignment op"<<endl;
        this->data = var.data;
        return *this;
    }

};


test passByref_returnByVal(test& obj)    
{    
    return obj;    
}


int main()
{

    test o1(5);
    test o2 = passByref_returnByVal(o1);
    cout<<"=========================="<<endl;
    test o3;
    o3 = passByref_returnByVal(o1);   
}

Output:

constructor

copy constructor

constructor

copy constructor

assignment op

destructor

In the given example , object o2 is directly copy constructed without using any temporaries.

But in the second case where i want o3 to be assigned the return value of the function, first a temporary is created using the copy constructor and then assignment operator is called for value assignment.

My question is what was the need for this temporary as my assignment operator takes reference. I found related questions but they didnt answer this.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T18:09:53+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 6:09 pm
    test o3;
    

    will cause a call to the constructor to create the object. C++ isn’t Java where an object type declaration only declares a references but doesn’t instantiate an object.

    test passByref_returnByVal(test& obj) {....}
    

    causes the copy constructor call because when inside of it you do return obj; the compiler needs to create a temporary object because the return type of that function is test (as opposed to test& or test*).

    Finally, because o3 already exists courtesy of the

    test o3;
    

    declaration, the assignment operator is called to assign the return value of passByref_returnByVal to the already-existing o3.

    So the copy constructor call is happening in passByref_returnByVal, not in your operator=.

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