I’m converting a C# project to C++ and have a question about deleting objects after use. In C# the GC of course takes care of deleting objects, but in C++ it has to be done explicitly using the delete keyword.
My question is, is it ok to just follow each object’s usage throughout a method and then delete it as soon as it goes out of scope (ie method end/re-assignment)?
I know though that the GC waits for a certain size of garbage (~1MB) before deleting; does it do this because there is an overhead when using delete?
As this is a game I am creating there will potentially be lots of objects being created and deleted every second, so would it be better to keep track of pointers that go out of scope, and once that size reachs 1MB to then delete the pointers?
(as a side note: later when the game is optimised, objects will be loaded once at startup so there is not much to delete during gameplay)
Your problem is that you are using pointers in C++.
This is a fundamental problem that you must fix, then all your problems go away. As chance would have it, I got so fed up with this general trend that I created a set of presentation slides on this issue. – (CC BY, so feel free to use them).
Have a look at the slides. While they are certainly not entirely serious, the fundamental message is still true: Don’t use pointers. But more accurately, the message should read: Don’t use
delete.In your particular situation you might find yourself with a lot of long-lived small objects. This is indeed a situation which a modern GC handles quite well, and which reference-counting smart pointers (
shared_ptr) handle less efficiently. If (and only if!) this becomes a performance problem, consider switching to a small object allocator library.