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Home/ Questions/Q 248129
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T21:19:01+00:00 2026-05-11T21:19:01+00:00

I am currently taking a c++ course and trying to get a deep understanding

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I am currently taking a c++ course and trying to get a deep understanding of the whole thing.
I came up with some theories, it would be great if somebody could confirm them:

Every variable (local,global,staic,member and non-member) is guaranteed to have its ctor called before first use

The ctors of primitives like int are essentially no-ops, so we have explicitly assign a value, there is no default zero value.

the following classes are semantically the same (and should generate identical code)

class A 
{ 
  int n; 
};

and

class A 
{
  int n;
 public:
  A() : n() {}
};

and

class A 
{
  int n;
 public:
  A() { n = int(); }
};

The variable n is in every case still uninitialized.

EDIT:

It seem that I absolutetly underestimated the complexity of this subject, most of my assumptions were wrong. Now Iam still trying to find out the basic rules of object initialisation.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T21:19:02+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 9:19 pm

    You might find this interesting.

    The difference between new Foo and new
    Foo() is that former will be
    uninitialized and the latter will be
    default initialized (to zero) when Foo
    is a POD type. So, when not using the
    form with the parens, the member “a”
    can contain garbage, but with the
    parens “a” will always be initialized
    to 0.

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