I have a constructor that takes some arguments. I had assumed that they were constructed in the order listed, but in one case it appears they were being constructed in reverse resulting in an abort. When I reversed the arguments the program stopped aborting. This is an example of the syntax I\'m using. The thing is, a_ needs to be initialized before b_ in this case. Can you guarantee the order of construction?
e.g.
class A
{
public:
A(OtherClass o, string x, int y) :
a_(o), b_(a_, x, y) { }
OtherClass a_;
AnotherClass b_;
};
It depends on the order of member variable declaration in the class. So a_
will be the first one, then b_
will be the second one in your example.
To quote the standard, for clarification:
12.6.2.5
Initialization shall proceed in the following order:
...
- Then, nonstatic data members shall be initialized in the order they were declared in the class definition
(again regardless of the order of the mem-initializers).
...
The standard reference for this now appears to be 12.6.2 section 13.3:
(13.3) — Then, non-static data members are initialized in the order they were declared in the class definition
(again regardless of the order of the mem-initializers).