That's not how this works. You replace the two operators, and this is done at link time. All you need to do is write a single TU that defines these operators and link it into the mix. Nobody else ever needs to know about this:
// optional_ops.cpp
void * operator new(std::size_t n) throw(std::bad_alloc)
{
//...
}
void operator delete(void * p) throw()
{
//...
}
In principle, there's no need for any header files to declare these functions (operator new
, operator delete
), since the declarations of those two functions are already hardcoded into the language, if you will. However, the names std
, std::bad_alloc
and std::size_t
are not predeclared, so you will probably want to include <new>
or some other header to provide those names.
In C++11 and beyond, you can alternatively use decltype(sizeof(0))
to get the size of the first parameter in a way that doesn't require any kind of library. C++11 also has a simpler exception model without dynamic exception specifications (which were finally removed from the language entirely in C++17).
void * operator new(decltype(sizeof(0)) n) noexcept(false)
{
//...
}
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