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Home/ Questions/Q 8801939
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T00:57:39+00:00 2026-06-14T00:57:39+00:00

Lets say we have the following code class Image { public: Image(const std::string &

  • 0

Lets say we have the following code

class Image
{
public:
    Image(const std::string & path)
    {
        pBitmap_ = FreeImage_Load( imageFormat, pathname.c_str() );
    }
    ~Image()
    {
        FreeImage_Unload(pBitmap_);
    }
private:
    FIBITMAP * pBitmap_;

};

How would Image(Image && rhs) be implemented?
after moving the dtor is still called on rhs, which will not give the intended effect?
I suppose something like

Image::Image( Image && rhs )
{
    pBitmap_ = std::move(rhs.pBitmap_);
            rhs.pBitmap_ = nullptr;
}

and then checking against null in the dtor should do the trick, but is there a better way?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T00:57:40+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 12:57 am

    The solution is to not do it yourself, but use the library facilities of the language:

    struct FiBitmapDeleter {
        void operator()(FIBITMAP *pBitmap) { FreeImage_Unload(pBitmap); }
    };
    
    class Image {
    private:
        std::unique_ptr<FIBITMAP, FiBitmapDeleter> pBitmap_;
    };
    

    Now you don’t need to write destructor, move constructor, or move assignment operator. Also your class automatically has its copy constructor and copy assignment operator deleted, so you don’t need to worry about those either, completing the Rule of Five.

    An alternative is to specialize default_delete, meaning that you don’t need to supply the deleter type to unique_ptr:

    namespace std {
        template<> struct default_delete<FIBITMAP> {
            void operator()(FIBITMAP *pBitmap) { FreeImage_Unload(pBitmap); }
        };
    }
    std::unique_ptr<FIBITMAP> pBitmap_;
    

    This has global effects, so you should only do it if you’re confident that yours is the only code in the program that might perform this specialization.

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