Hi guys, I am looking at some high stack usage of some code (gcc, via -fstack-usage) .. and I'm actually surprised that a simple object reinitialization like
a = {}; // (assume we got a "A& a" from somewhere
seems to cause temporary object first being created on the stack, and then copy-assigned, causing some sizeof(A) stack usage (even with gcc -O3, C++14).
Why isn't the compiler automatically doing it similar to a placement new like
new (&a) A(); (yeah, call destructor before, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2166099/calling-a-constructor-to-re-initialize-object frowns upon that "h…
a = {}; // (assume we got a "A& a" from somewhere
seems to cause temporary object first being created on the stack, and then copy-assigned, causing some sizeof(A) stack usage (even with gcc -O3, C++14).
Why isn't the compiler automatically doing it similar to a placement new like
new (&a) A(); (yeah, call destructor before, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2166099/calling-a-constructor-to-re-initialize-object frowns upon that "h…