I'm having a hard time justifying that you use

new X(args)

to create a class object, and

X(args)

to create a struct object. I wrote this:

============
The syntactic  difference between  the expression creating  a @struct@
object---Test(@\meta{args}@)@---and the  expression creating a @class@
object---\cc{new Test(}\meta{args}@)@---may be  jarring at first. \dee
could have dropped the @new@  keyword entirely, but that @new@ reminds
the programmer that an object allocation (i.e., nontrivial work) takes
place.
===============

I'm unhappy about that explanation because the distinction is indeed very weak. The constructor of a struct could also do unbounded amounts of work, so what gives?

I hereby suggest we get rid of new for class object creation. What do you guys think?


Andrei

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