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Home/ Questions/Q 509527
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T07:01:12+00:00 2026-05-13T07:01:12+00:00

I have a class like this: class Inner; class Cont { public: Cont(); virtual

  • 0

I have a class like this:

class Inner;

class Cont
{
public:
    Cont();
    virtual ~Cont();
private:
    Inner* m_inner;
};

in the .cpp, the constructor creates an instance of Inner with new and the destructor deletes it. This is working pretty well.
Now I want to change this code to use auto_ptr so I write:

class Inner;

class Cont
{
public:
    Cont();
    virtual ~Cont();
private:
    std::auto_ptr<Inner> m_inner;
};

Now, the constructor initialized the auto_ptr and the destructor does nothing.

But it doesn’t work. the problem seem to arise when I’m instantiating this class. I get this warning:

warning C4150: deletion of pointer to
incomplete type ‘Inner’; no
destructor called

Well, this is obviously very bad and I understand why it happens, The compiler doesn’t know about the d’tor of Inner when instantiating the template of auto_ptr<Inner>

So my question: Is there a way to use auto_ptr with a forward declaration like I did in the version that uses just plain pointers?
Having to #include every class I declare a pointer to is a huge hassle and at times, just impossible. How is this problem usually handled?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T07:01:12+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:01 am

    You need to include the header defining class Inner into the file where Cont::~Cont() implementation is located. This way you still have a forward declaration in teh header defining class Cont and the compiler sees class Inner definition and can call the destructor.

    //Cont.h
    class Inner; // is defined in Inner.h
    class Cont 
    { 
        virtual ~Cont(); 
        std::auto_ptr<Inner> m_inner;
    };
    
    // Cont.cpp
    #include <Cont.h>
    #include <Inner.h>
    
    Cont::~Cont()
    {
    }
    
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