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Home/ Questions/Q 8729401
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T08:49:35+00:00 2026-06-13T08:49:35+00:00

Say I have a function that creates a QIODevice (e.g. a QFile), then returns

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Say I have a function that creates a QIODevice (e.g. a QFile), then returns a pointer to a QDataStream constructed from the QIODevice. What is the best way to deal with the memory allocation here? Clearly the QIODevice must be heap allocated to stay available to the QDataStream upon function termination, however the destruction of a QDataStream does not destroy or close the device. Is there a standard way of dealing with this seemingly common problem?
Ideally I want a function that returns an object (not a pointer to an object) that behaves like a QDataStream but upon destruction closes the device. Effectively a standard library input stream.

Example code:

QDataStream* getStream(const QString& filename) {
  QFile* file = new QFile(filename); // needs to be explicitly deleted later
  file->open(QIODevice::ReadOnly);
  QDataStream* out = new QDataStream(&file); // same here
  return out;
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T08:49:36+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 8:49 am
    std::shared_ptr<QDataStream> getStream(const QString& filename) 
    {
      QFile* file = new QFile(filename); // needs to be explicitly deleted later
      file->open(QIODevice::ReadOnly);
      std:shared_ptr<QDataStream> out(new QDataStream(&file), QDSDeleter);
      return out;
    }
    
    void QDSDeleter(QDataStream* s)
    {
       QIODevice* device = s->device();
       device->close();
       delete device;
    }
    

    std::unique_ptr is another option depending on your needs; here’s a reference for the former if you need it.

    Edit: Qt also has the facility for this with its QSharedPointer class, where you can also supply a deleter as a constructor argument. Other pointer wrapper options are given there. Thanks @RA. for the correction.

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