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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T16:42:10+00:00 2026-05-10T16:42:10+00:00

In C++ you can initialize a variable in an if statement, like so: if

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In C++ you can initialize a variable in an if statement, like so:

if (CThing* pThing = GetThing()) { } 

Why would one consider this bad or good style? What are the benefits and disadvantages?

Personally i like this style because it limits the scope of the pThing variable, so it can never be used accidentally when it is NULL. However, i don’t like that you can’t do this:

if (CThing* pThing = GetThing() && pThing->IsReallySomeThing()) { } 

If there’s a way to make the above work, please post. But if that’s just not possible, i’d still like to know why.

Question borrowed from here, similar topic but PHP.

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  1. 2026-05-10T16:42:10+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 4:42 pm

    The important thing is that a declaration in C++ is not an expression.

    bool a = (CThing* pThing = GetThing()); // not legit!! 

    You can’t do both a declaration and boolean logic in an if statement, C++ language spec specifically allows either an expression or a declaration.

    if(A *a = new A) {     // this is legit and a is scoped here } 

    How can we know whether a is defined between one term and another in an expression?

    if((A *a = new A) && a->test()) {     // was a really declared before a->test? } 

    Bite the bullet and use an internal if. The scope rules are useful and your logic is explicit:

    if (CThing* pThing = GetThing()) {     if(pThing->IsReallySomeThing())     {     } } 
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