The difference is important with PODs (basically, all built-in types like int
, bool
, double
etc. plus C-like structs and unions built only from other PODs), for which there is a difference between default initialization and value initialization. For PODs, a simple
T obj;
will leave obj
uninitialized, while T()
default-initializes the object. So
T obj = T();
is a good way to ensure that an object is properly initialized.
This is especially helpful in template code, where T
might either a POD or a non-POD type. When you know that T
is not a POD type, T obj;
suffices.
Addendum: You can also write
T* ptr = new T; // note the missing ()
(and avoid initialization of the allocated object if T
is a POD).
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