On 12/11/14 11:29, "Marc =?UTF-8?B?U2Now7x0eiI=?= <schue...@gmx.net>" wrote:

Supposedly, a struct destructor will only access resources that the
struct itself manages. As long as that's the case, it will be safe. In
practice, there's still a lot that can go wrong.

Either a struct's destructor can be run from the context of a GC, in which case it should run when the struct is directly allocated on the heap, or it is not, in which case the fact it is run when the struct is inside a class should be considered a bug.


Today it happens for structs nested in classes, but not allocated directly. I don't see any situation in which this is not a bug.

Shachar

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