______________________________________________________________________

  12   Special member functions                                [special]

  ______________________________________________________________________

1 The default constructor  (_class.ctor_),  copy  constructor  and  copy
  assignment  operator (_class.copy_), and destructor (_class.dtor_) are
  special member functions.  The implementation will implicitly  declare
  these  member  functions  for  a  class type when the program does not
  explicitly declare them, except as noted in _class.ctor_.  The  imple­
  mentation  will  implicitly define them if they are used, as specified
  in _class.ctor_, _class.dtor_ and _class.copy_.   Programs  shall  not
  define  implicitly-declared  special  member  functions.  Programs may
  explicitly refer to  implicitly  declared  special  member  functions.
  [Example: a program may explicitly call, take the address of or form a
  pointer to member to an implicitly declared special member function.
          struct A { }; // implicitly-declared A::operator=
          struct B : A {
                  B& operator=(const B &);
          };
          B& B::operator=(const B& s) {
                  this->A::operator=(s); // well-formed
          }
   --end example] [Note: the special member  functions  affect  the  way
  objects of class type are created, copied, and destroyed, and how val­
  ues can be converted to values of other  types.   Often  such  special
  member functions are called implicitly.  ]

2 Special member functions obey the usual access rules (_class.access_).
  [Example: declaring a constructor protected ensures that only  derived
  classes and friends can create objects using it.  ]

  12.1  Constructors                                        [class.ctor]

1 Constructors  do not have names.  A special declarator syntax using an
  optional function-specifier (_dcl.fct.spec_) followed by the construc­
  tor's  class  name  followed by a parameter list is used to declare or
  define the constructor.  In such a declaration,  optional  parentheses
  around the constructor class name are ignored.  [Example:
          class C {
          public:
                  C();       // declares the constructor
          };

          C::C() { }         // defines the constructor
   --end example]

2 A  constructor  is  used  to  initialize  objects  of  its class type.
  Because constructors do not have names, they are  never  found  during
  name  lookup; however an explicit type conversion using the functional
  notation (_expr.type.conv_) will cause a constructor to be  called  to
  initialize  an  object.  [Note: for initialization of objects of class
  type see _class.init_.  ]

3 A typedef-name that names a class  is  a  class-name  (_dcl.typedef_);
  however,  a  typedef-name  that names a class shall not be used as the
  identifier in the declarator for a constructor declaration.

4 A  constructor  shall  not  be  virtual  (_class.virtual_)  or  static
  (_class.static_).   A constructor can be invoked for a const, volatile
  or const volatile object.  A constructor shall not be declared  const,
  volatile, or const volatile (_class.this_).  const and volatile seman­
  tics (_dcl.type.cv_) are not applied on an object under  construction.
  Such semantics only come into effect once the constructor for the most
  derived object (_intro.object_) ends.

5 A default constructor for a class X is a constructor of class  X  that
  can  be called without an argument.  If there is no user-declared con­
  structor for class X, a default constructor  is  implicitly  declared.
  An  implicitly-declared default constructor is an inline public member
  of its class.  A constructor  is  trivial  if  it  is  an  implicitly-
  declared default constructor and if:

  --its  class has no virtual functions (_class.virtual_) and no virtual
    base classes (_class.mi_), and

  --all the direct base classes of its class have trivial  constructors,
    and

  --for  all  the  nonstatic data members of its class that are of class
    type (or array thereof), each such class has a trivial  constructor.

6 Otherwise, the constructor is non-trivial.

7 An  implicitly-declared  default constructor for a class is implicitly
  defined when it is  used  to  create  an  object  of  its  class  type
  (_intro.object_).  The implicitly-defined default constructor performs
  the set of initializations of the class that would be performed  by  a
  user-written default constructor for that class with an empty mem-ini­
  tializer-list (_class.base.init_) and an empty function body.  If that
  user-written  default  constructor would be ill-formed, the program is
  ill-formed.

  +-------                      BEGIN BOX 1                     -------+
  This makes the following non-editorial change: A  class  with  a  non­
  static  data  member  of  a  const-qualified non-POD class type with a
  user-declared default constructor (for the member) is valid under  the
  new  rules,  invalid  under the old rules.  This was probably a bug in
  the old wording, and is corrected here.
  +-------                       END BOX 1                      -------+

  Before the implicitly-declared default  constructor  for  a  class  is
  implicitly  defined,  all the implicitly-declared default constructors
  for its base classes and its nonstatic data members  shall  have  been
  implicitly defined.  [Note: an implicitly-declared default constructor
  has an exception-specification (_except.spec_).  ]

8 Default constructors are called implicitly to create class objects  of
  static    or    automatic    storage   duration   (_basic.stc.static_,
  _basic.stc.auto_) defined without  an  initializer  (_dcl.init_),  are
  called   to   create   class   objects  of  dynamic  storage  duration
  (_basic.stc.dynamic_) created by a new-expression in  which  the  new-
  initializer  is  omitted (_expr.new_), or are called when the explicit
  type conversion syntax (_expr.type.conv_) is used.  A program is  ill-
  formed if the default constructor for an object is implicitly used and
  the constructor is not accessible (_class.access_).

9 [Note: _class.base.init_ describes the order in which constructors for
  base  classes and non-static data members are called and describes how
  arguments can be specified for the calls to these constructors.  ]

10A copy constructor for a class X is a constructor with a first parame­
  ter  of type X& or of type const X&.  [Note: see _class.copy_ for more
  information on copy constructors.  ]

11A union member shall not be of a class type (or  array  thereof)  that
  has a non-trivial constructor.

12No  return  type (not even void) shall be specified for a constructor.
  A return statement in the body of a constructor shall  not  specify  a
  return value.  The address of a constructor shall not be taken.

13A  functional  notation type conversion (_expr.type.conv_) can be used
  to create new objects of its type.  [Note: The syntax  looks  like  an
  explicit call of the constructor.  ] [Example:
          complex zz = complex(1,2.3);
          cprint( complex(7.8,1.2) );
    --end  example]  An  object  created in this way is unnamed.  [Note:
  _class.temporary_ describes the  lifetime  of  temporary  objects.   ]
  [Note:   explicit   constructor   calls  do  not  yield  lvalues,  see
  _basic.lval_.  ]

14[Note: some language constructs have special semantics when used  dur­
  ing construction; see _class.base.init_ and _class.cdtor_.  ]

  12.2  Temporary objects                              [class.temporary]

1 While  evaluating  an  expression, it might be necessary or convenient
  for an implementation to generate temporary  objects  to  hold  values
  resulting  from  the  evaluation  of  the expression's subexpressions.
  During this evaluation, precisely when such temporaries are introduced
  is  unspecified.   Even  when  the creation of the temporary object is
  avoided, all the semantic restrictions must be  respected  as  if  the
  temporary  object was created.  [Example: even if the copy constructor
  is not called, all the semantic restrictions,  such  as  accessibility

  (_class.access_), shall be satisfied.  ]

2 [Example:
          class X {
              // ...
          public:
              // ...
              X(int);
              X(const X&);
              ~X();
          };

          X f(X);
          void g()
          {
              X a(1);
              X b = f(X(2));
              a = f(a);
          }
  Here,  an  implementation  might use a temporary in which to construct
  X(2) before passing it to f()  using  X's  copy-constructor;  alterna­
  tively,  X(2) might be constructed in the space used to hold the argu­
  ment.  Also, a temporary might be used to hold the result  of  f(X(2))
  before  copying  it  to  b  using X's copy-constructor; alternatively,
  f()'s result might be constructed  in  b.   On  the  other  hand,  the
  expression  a=f(a)  requires  a temporary for either the argument a or
  the result of f(a) to avoid undesired aliasing of a.  ]

3 When an implementation introduces a temporary object of a  class  that
  has  a  non-trivial constructor (_class.ctor_), it shall ensure that a
  constructor is  called  for  the  temporary  object.   Similarly,  the
  destructor shall be called for a temporary with a non-trivial destruc­
  tor (_class.dtor_).  Temporary objects are destroyed as the last  step
  in evaluating the full-expression (_intro.execution_) that (lexically)
  contains the point where they were created.  This is true even if that
  evaluation ends in throwing an exception.

4 There are two contexts in which temporaries are destroyed at a differ­
  ent point than the end of the full-expression.  The first  context  is
  when an expression appears as an initializer for a declarator defining
  an object.  In that context, the temporary that holds  the  result  of
  the expression shall persist until the object's initialization is com­
  plete.  The object is initialized from a copy of the temporary; during
  this  copying,  an  implementation  can call the copy constructor many
  times; the temporary is destroyed after it has been copied, before  or
  when the initialization completes.  If many temporaries are created by
  the evaluation of the initializer, the temporaries  are  destroyed  in
  reverse order of the completion of their construction.

5 The  second  context is when a reference is bound to a temporary.  The
  temporary to which the reference is bound or the temporary that is the
  complete  object  to  a subobject of which the temporary is bound per­
  sists for the lifetime of the reference or until the end of the  scope
  in which the temporary is created, whichever comes first.  A temporary

  holding the result of an initializer expression for a declarator  that
  declares  a reference persists until the end of the scope in which the
  reference declaration occurs.  A temporary bound to a reference  in  a
  constructor's  ctor-initializer (_class.base.init_) persists until the
  constructor exits.  A temporary bound to a reference  parameter  in  a
  function  call (_expr.call_) persists until the completion of the full
  expression containing the call.   A  temporary  bound  in  a  function
  return  statement  (_stmt.return_)  persists until the function exits.
  In all these cases, the temporaries created during the  evaluation  of
  the  expression  initializing  the  reference, except the temporary to
  which the reference is bound, are destroyed at the end  of  the  full-
  expression  in  which they are created and in the reverse order of the
  completion of their construction.  If the lifetime of two or more tem­
  poraries  to  which references are bound ends at the same point, these
  temporaries are destroyed at that point in the reverse  order  of  the
  completion  of  their  construction.   In addition, the destruction of
  temporaries bound to references shall take into account  the  ordering
  of  destruction  of  objects with static or automatic storage duration
  (_basic.stc.static_, _basic.stc.auto_); that is, if obj1 is an  object
  with static or automatic storage duration created before the temporary
  is created, the temporary shall be destroyed before obj1 is destroyed;
  if obj2 is an object with static or automatic storage duration created
  after the temporary is created, the temporary shall be destroyed after
  obj2 is destroyed.  [Example:
          class C {
                  // ...
          public:
                  C();
                  C(int);
                  friend const C& operator+(const C&, const C&);
                  ~C();
          };
          C obj1;
          const C& cr = C(16)+C(23);
          C obj2;
  the  expression C(16)+C(23) creates three temporaries.  A first tempo­
  rary T1 to hold the result of the expression C(16), a second temporary
  T2  to  hold the result of the expression C(23), and a third temporary
  T3 to hold the result of the addition of these two  expressions.   The
  temporary  T3  is then bound to the reference cr.  Because addition is
  commutative, it is unspecified whether T1 or T2 is created first.   On
  an implementation where T1 is created before T2, it is guaranteed that
  T2 is destroyed before T1.  The temporaries T1 and T2 are bound to the
  reference  parameters of operator+; these temporaries are destroyed at
  the end of the full expression containing the call to operator+.   The
  temporary T3 bound to the reference cr is destroyed at the end of cr's
  lifetime, that is, at the end of the program.  In addition, the  order
  in  which  T3 is destroyed takes into account the destruction order of
  other objects with static storage duration.  That is, because obj1  is
  constructed  before T3, and T3 is constructed before obj2, it is guar­
  anteed that obj2 is destroyed before T3,  and  that  T3  is  destroyed
  before obj1.  ]

  12.3  Conversions                                         [class.conv]

1 Type conversions of class objects can be specified by constructors and
  by conversion functions.  These conversions  are  called  user-defined
  conversions  and  are used for implicit type conversions (_conv_), for
  initialization  (_dcl.init_),  and  for  explicit   type   conversions
  (_expr.cast_, _expr.static.cast_).

2 User-defined  conversions  are applied only where they are unambiguous
  (_class.member.lookup_,  _class.conv.fct_).   Conversions   obey   the
  access  control  rules  (_class.access_).   Access  control is applied
  after ambiguity resolution (_basic.lookup_).

3 [Note: See _over.match_ for a discussion of the use of conversions  in
  function calls as well as examples below.  ]

  12.3.1  Conversion by constructor                    [class.conv.ctor]

1 A  constructor  declared  without the function-specifier explicit that
  can be called with a single parameter specifies a conversion from  the
  type  of  its  first  parameter to the type of its class.  Such a con­
  structor is called a converting constructor.  [Example:
          class X {
              // ...
          public:
              X(int);
              X(const char*, int =0);
          };
          void f(X arg)
          {
              X a = 1;         // a = X(1)
              X b = "Jessie";  // b = X("Jessie",0)
              a = 2;           // a = X(2)
              f(3);            // f(X(3))
          }
   --end example]

2 An explicit constructor constructs objects just like non-explicit con­
  structors,  but  does  so  only where the direct-initialization syntax
  (_dcl.init_) or  where  casts  (_expr.static.cast_,  _expr.cast_)  are
  explicitly  used.   A default constructor may be an explicit construc­
  tor; such a constructor will be used to perform default-initialization
  (_dcl.init_).  [Example:
          class Z {
          public:
                  explicit Z();
                  explicit Z(int);
                  // ...
          };

          Z a;             // ok: default-initialization performed
          Z a1 = 1;        // error: no implicit conversion
          Z a3 = Z(1);     // ok: direct initialization syntax used
          Z a2(1);         // ok: direct initialization syntax used
          Z* p = new Z(1); // ok: direct initialization syntax used
          Z a4 = (Z)1;              // ok: explicit cast used
          Z a5 = static_cast<Z>(1); // ok: explicit cast used
   --end example]

3 A  copy-constructor  (_class.copy_)  is  a converting constructor.  An
  implicitly-declared copy constructor is not an  explicit  constructor;
  it may be called for implicit type conversions.

  12.3.2  Conversion functions                          [class.conv.fct]

1 A member function of a class X with a name of the form
          conversion-function-id:
                  operator conversion-type-id
          conversion-type-id:
                  type-specifier-seq conversion-declaratoropt
          conversion-declarator:
                  ptr-operator conversion-declaratoropt
  specifies a conversion from X to the type specified by the conversion-
  type-id.  Such  member  functions  are  called  conversion  functions.
  Classes,  enumerations, and typedef-names shall not be declared in the
  type-specifier-seq.  Neither parameter types nor return  type  can  be
  specified.  The type of a conversion function (_dcl.fct_) is "function
  taking no parameter returning conversion-type-id."  A conversion oper­
  ator  is never used to convert a (possibly cv-qualified) object to the
  (possibly cv-qualified) same object type (or a reference to it), to  a
  (possibly  cv-qualified)  base  class  of that type (or a reference to
  it), or to (possibly cv-qualified) void.1)

2 [Example:
          class X {
              // ...
          public:
              operator int();
          };
          void f(X a)
          {
              int i = int(a);
              i = (int)a;
              i = a;
          }
  In  all  three  cases  the  value  assigned  will  be   converted   by
  X::operator int().   --end example]

  _________________________
  1) Even though never directly called to  perform  a  conversion,  such
  conversion  operators  can  be declared and can potentially be reached
  through a call to a virtual conversion operator in a base class

3 User-defined  conversions are not restricted to use in assignments and
  initializations.  [Example:
          void g(X a, X b)
          {
              int i = (a) ? 1+a : 0;
              int j = (a&&b) ? a+b : i;
              if (a) { // ...
              }
          }
   --end example]

4 The conversion-type-id shall not represent  a  function  type  nor  an
  array type.  The conversion-type-id in a conversion-function-id is the
  longest possible sequence of conversion-declarators.  [Note: this pre­
  vents ambiguities between the declarator operator * and its expression
  counterparts.  [Example:
          &ac.operator int*i; // syntax error:
                              // parsed as: '&(ac.operator int *) i'
                              // not as: '&(ac.operator int)*i'
  The * is the pointer declarator and not the  multiplication  operator.
  ] ]

5 Conversion operators are inherited.

6 Conversion functions can be virtual.

7 At  most  one user-defined conversion (constructor or conversion func­
  tion) is implicitly applied to a single value.  [Example:
          class X {
              // ...
          public:
              operator int();
          };
          class Y {
              // ...
          public:
              operator X();
          };
          Y a;
          int b = a;    // error:
                        // a.operator X().operator int() not tried
          int c = X(a); // ok: a.operator X().operator int()
   --end example]

8 User-defined conversions are used implicitly only if  they  are  unam­
  biguous.   A  conversion  function  in a derived class does not hide a
  conversion function in a base class unless the two  functions  convert
  to  the  same  type.  Function overload resolution (_over.match.best_)
  selects the  best  conversion  function  to  perform  the  conversion.
  [Example:

          class X {
          public:
              // ...
              operator int();
          };
          class Y : public X {
          public:
              // ...
              operator void*();
          };
          void f(Y& a)
          {
              if (a) {    // ill-formed:
                          // X::operator int()
                          // or Y::operator void*()
                  // ...
              }
          }
   --end example]

  12.4  Destructors                                         [class.dtor]

1 A  special  declarator  syntax  using  an  optional function-specifier
  (_dcl.fct.spec_) followed by ~ followed by the destructor's class name
  followed  by an empty parameter list is used to declare the destructor
  in a class definition.  In such a declaration, the ~ followed  by  the
  destructor's  class name can be enclosed in optional parentheses; such
  parentheses are ignored.  A typedef-name  that  names  a  class  is  a
  class-name (_dcl.typedef_); however, a typedef-name that names a class
  shall not be used as the identifier in the declarator for a destructor
  declaration.

2 A destructor is used to destroy objects of its class type.  A destruc­
  tor takes no parameters, and no return type can be  specified  for  it
  (not  even  void).  The address of a destructor shall not be taken.  A
  destructor shall not be static.  A destructor can  be  invoked  for  a
  const,  volatile  or const volatile object.  A destructor shall not be
  declared const, volatile or const volatile (_class.this_).  const  and
  volatile  semantics (_dcl.type.cv_) are not applied on an object under
  destruction.  Such semantics stop being into effect once the  destruc­
  tor for the most derived object (_intro.object_) starts.

3 If  a  class has no user-declared destructor, a destructor is declared
  implicitly.  An implicitly-declared destructor  is  an  inline  public
  member  of its class.  A destructor is trivial if it is an implicitly-
  declared destructor and if:

  --all of the direct base classes of its class have trivial destructors
    and

  --for  all  of  the  non-static  data members of its class that are of
    class type (or  array  thereof),  each  such  class  has  a  trivial
    destructor.

4 Otherwise, the destructor is non-trivial.

5 An  implicitly-declared  destructor  is  implicitly defined when it is
  used to destroy an object of its class type (_basic.stc_).  A  program
  is  ill-formed  if  the  class  for  which  a destructor is implicitly
  defined has:

  --a non-static data member of class type (or array  thereof)  with  an
    inaccessible destructor, or

  --a base class with an inaccessible destructor.

  Before  the  implicitly-declared  destructor for a class is implicitly
  defined, all the implicitly-declared destructors for its base  classes
  and  its  nonstatic  data  members shall have been implicitly defined.
  [Note: an implicitly-declared destructor has  an  exception-specifica­
  tion (_except.spec_).  ]

6 A destructor for class X calls the destructors for X's direct members,
  the destructors for X's direct base classes and, if X is the  type  of
  the  most  derived class (_class.base.init_), its destructor calls the
  destructors for X's virtual  base  classes.   Bases  and  members  are
  destroyed  in the reverse order of the completion of their constructor
  (see _class.base.init_).  A  return  statement  (_stmt.return_)  in  a
  destructor  might  not directly return to the caller; before transfer­
  ring control to the caller, the destructors for the members and  bases
  are  called.   Destructors  for  elements  of  an  array are called in
  reverse order of their construction (see _class.init_).

7 A destructor can be declared virtual (_class.virtual_) or pure virtual
  (_class.abstract_);  if any objects of that class or any derived class
  are created in the program, the destructor shall  be  defined.   If  a
  class  has  a  base  class  with a virtual destructor, its  destructor
  (whether user- or implicitly- declared) is virtual.

8 [Note: some language constructs have special semantics when used  dur­
  ing destruction; see _class.cdtor_.  ]

9 A  union  member  shall not be of a class type (or array thereof) that
  has a non-trivial destructor.

10Destructors are invoked implicitly (1) for a constructed  object  with
  static  storage  duration  (_basic.stc.static_) at program termination
  (_basic.start.term_), (2) for  a  constructed  object  with  automatic
  storage duration (_basic.stc.auto_) when the block in which the object
  is created exits (_stmt.dcl_), (3) for a constructed temporary  object
  when  the  lifetime  of the temporary object ends (_class.temporary_),
  (4)  for  a  constructed  object   allocated   by   a   new-expression
  (_expr.new_),  through use of a delete-expression (_expr.delete_), (5)
  in several situations due to the handling of exceptions  (_except.han­
  dle_).   A  program  is  ill-formed if the destructor for an object is
  implicitly used and it is not accessible  (_class.access_).   Destruc­
  tors can also be invoked explicitly.

11A  delete-expression invokes the destructor for the referenced object;
  the object's memory location is then passed to a deallocation function
  (_expr.delete_, _class.free_).  [Example:
          class X {
              // ...
          public:
              X(int);
              ~X();
          };
          void g(X*);
          void f()        // common use:
          {
              X* p = new X(111);  // allocate and initialize
              g(p);
              delete p;           // cleanup and deallocate
          }
   --end example]

12In  an  explicit  destructor  call, the destructor name appears as a ~
  followed by a type-name that names the destructor's class  type.   The
  invocation  of  a  destructor is subject to the usual rules for member
  functions (_class.mfct_), that  is,  if  the  object  is  not  of  the
  destructor's class type and not of class derived from the destructor's
  class type, the program has undefined behavior (except  that  invoking
  delete on a null pointer has no effect).  [Example:
          struct B {
                  virtual ~B() { }
          };
          struct D : B {
                  ~D() { }
          };
          D D_object;
          typedef B B_alias;
          B* B_ptr = &D_object;
          D_object.B::~B();     // calls B's destructor
          B_ptr->~B();          // calls D's destructor
          B_ptr->~B_alias();    // calls D's destructor
          B_ptr->B_alias::~B(); // calls B's destructor
          B_ptr->B_alias::~B_alias(); // error, no B_alias in class B
   --end example]

13[Note:  explicit  calls  of destructors are rarely needed.  One use of
  such calls is for objects placed at specific addresses  using  a  new-
  expression  with the placement option.  Such use of explicit placement
  and destruction of objects can be necessary  to  cope  with  dedicated
  hardware  resources and for writing memory management facilities.  For
  example,
          void* operator new(size_t, void* p) { return p; }
          struct X {
              // ...
              X(int);
              ~X();
          };
          void f(X* p);

          void g()        // rare, specialized use:
          {
              char* buf = new char[sizeof(X)];
              X* p = new(buf) X(222);  // use buf[] and initialize
              f(p);
              p->X::~X();              // cleanup
          }
   --end note]

14Once a destructor is invoked for  an  object,  the  object  no  longer
  exists;  the behavior is undefined if the destructor is invoked for an
  object whose lifetime has  ended  (_basic.life_).   [Example:  if  the
  destructor  for  an  automatic  object  is explicitly invoked, and the
  block is subsequently left in a manner that  would  ordinarily  invoke
  implicit destruction of the object, the behavior is undefined.  ]

15[Note:  the notation for explicit call of a destructor can be used for
  any scalar type name (_expr.pseudo_).  Allowing this makes it possible
  to  write  code  without  having  to know if a destructor exists for a
  given type. For example,
          typedef int I;
          I* p;
          // ...
          p->I::~I();
   --end note]

16
  12.5  Free store                                          [class.free]

1 When an object is created with a new-expression (_expr.new_), an allo­
  cation    function    (operator new()   for   non-array   objects   or
  operator new[]()  for  arrays)  is  (implicitly)  called  to  get  the
  required storage (_basic.stc.dynamic.allocation_).

2 When a new-expression is used to create an object of class T (or array
  thereof), the allocation function is looked up in the scope  of  class
  T;  if no allocation function is found, the global allocation function
  is used (_basic.stc.dynamic.allocation_).

3 When a new-expression is executed, the  selected  allocation  function
  shall  be called with the amount of space requested (possibly zero) as
  its first argument.

4 Any allocation function for a class T is a static member (even if  not
  explicitly declared static).

5 [Example:
          class Arena;
          struct B {
              void* operator new(size_t, Arena*);
          };
          struct D1 : B {
          };

          Arena*  ap;
          void foo(int i)
          {
              new (ap) D1;  // calls B::operator new(size_t, Arena*)
              new D1[i];    // calls ::operator new[](size_t)
              new D1;       // ill-formed: ::operator new(size_t) hidden
          }
   --end example]

6 When  an object is deleted with a delete-expression (_expr.delete_), a
  deallocation function  (operator delete()  for  non-array  objects  or
  operator delete[]()  for arrays) is (implicitly) called to reclaim the
  storage occupied by the object (_basic.stc.dynamic.deallocation_).

7 When a delete-expression is used to deallocate an array of objects  of
  class T, the deallocation function to be called is determined by look­
  ing up the name of operator delete[] in the scope of class T.  If  the
  result  of  this  lookup  is ambiguous or inaccessible, the program is
  ill-formed.  If no deallocation function is found in that  scope,  the
  global  deallocation  function  (_basic.stc.dynamic.deallocation_)  is
  used; see _expr.delete_.

8 When a delete-expression is used to  deallocate  an  object  of  class
  type,  and  the  static type of the object to be deleted has a virtual
  destructor, the deallocation function to be called is that which would
  be found by looking up the name of operator delete in the scope of the
  class that is the dynamic type of the object.  Otherwise,  the  static
  and  dynamic  types of the object shall be identical and the dealloca­
  tion function to be called is determined by looking  up  the  name  of
  operator  delete  in the scope of the class that is the static type of
  the  object.2)  If the result of the lookup is ambiguous or inaccessi­
  ble, the program is ill-formed.  If no deallocation function is  found
  in     that     scope,     the     global     deallocation    function
  (_basic.stc.dynamic.deallocation_) is used; see _expr.delete_.

9 When a delete-expression is executed, the selected deallocation  func­
  tion  shall  be  called with the address of the block of storage to be
  reclaimed as its first argument and (if  the  two-parameter  style  is
  used) the size of the block as its second argument.3)

10Any  deallocation  function  for a class X is a static member (even if
  not explicitly declared static).  [Example:

  _________________________
  2) A similar look up is not needed for the array version of the delete
  operator  because  _expr.delete_  requires that in this situation, the
  static type of the delete-expression's operand be the same as its  dy­
  namic type.
  3)  If  the static type in the delete-expression is different from the
  dynamic type and the destructor is not virtual the size might  be  in­
  correct, but that case is already undefined; see _expr.delete_.

          class X {
              // ...
              void operator delete(void*);
              void operator delete[](void*, size_t);
          };
          class Y {
              // ...
              void operator delete(void*, size_t);
              void operator delete[](void*);
          };
   --end example]

11Since member allocation and deallocation  functions  are  static  they
  cannot  be  virtual.   [Note:  however,  when the cast-expression of a
  delete-expression refers to an object of class type, because the deal­
  location  function  actually  called  is looked up in the scope of the
  destructor, if the destructor is virtual, the effect is the same.  For
  example,
          struct B {
              virtual ~B();
              void operator delete(void*, size_t);
          };
          struct D : B {
              void operator delete(void*);
          };
          void f()
          {
              B* bp = new D;
              delete bp;     //1: uses D::operator delete(void*)
          }
  Here,  storage  for  the non-array object of class D is deallocated by
  D::operator delete(), due to the virtual destructor.  ] [Note: virtual
  destructors  have  no  effect  on  the  deallocation function actually
  called when the cast-expression of a delete-expression  refers  to  an
  array of objects of class type.  For example,
          struct B {
              virtual ~B();
              void operator delete[](void*, size_t);
          };
          struct D : B {
              void operator delete[](void*, size_t);
          };
          void f(int i)
          {
              D* dp = new D[i];
              delete [] dp;  // uses D::operator delete[](void*, size_t)
              B* bp = new D[i];
              delete[] bp;   // undefined behavior
          }
   --end note]

12Access  to  the  deallocation  function is checked statically.  Hence,
  even though a different one might actually be executed, the statically
  visible deallocation function is required to be accessible.  [Example:

  for the call on line //1 above, if B::operator delete() had been  pri­
  vate, the delete expression would have been ill-formed.  ]

  12.6  Initialization                                      [class.init]

1 When  no initializer is specified for an object of (possibly cv-quali­
  fied) class type (or array thereof), or the initializer has  the  form
  (),  the  object is initialized as specified in _dcl.init_.  [Note: if
  the class is a non-POD, it is default-initialized.  ]

2 An object of class type (or array thereof) can be explicitly  initial­
  ized; see _class.expl.init_ and _class.base.init_.

3 When  an  array  of class objects is initialized (either explicitly or
  implicitly), the constructor shall be called for each element  of  the
  array,   following  the  subscript  order;  see  _dcl.array_.   [Note:
  destructors for the array elements are  called  in  reverse  order  of
  their construction.  ]

  12.6.1  Explicit initialization                      [class.expl.init]

1 An  object  of  class  type  can  be  initialized with a parenthesized
  expression-list, where the expression-list is construed as an argument
  list  for  a  constructor  that  is  called  to initialize the object.
  Alternatively, a single assignment-expression can be specified  as  an
  initializer  using  the  = form of initialization.  Either direct-ini­
  tialization semantics  or  copy-initialization  semantics  apply;  see
  _dcl.init_.  [Example:
          class complex {
              // ...
          public:
              complex();
              complex(double);
              complex(double,double);
              // ...
          };

          complex sqrt(complex,complex);
          complex a(1);             // initialize by a call of
                                    // complex(double)
          complex b = a;            // initialize by a copy of `a'
          complex c = complex(1,2); // construct complex(1,2)
                                    // using complex(double,double)
                                    // copy it into `c'
          complex d = sqrt(b,c);    // call sqrt(complex,complex)
                                    // and copy the result into `d'
          complex e;                // initialize by a call of
                                    // complex()
          complex f = 3;            // construct complex(3) using
                                    // complex(double)
                                    // copy it into `f'
          complex g = { 1, 2 };     // error; constructor is required
     --end  example]  [Note:  overloading  of  the  assignment  operator
  (_over.ass_) = has no effect on initialization.  ]

2 When an aggregate (whether class or array) contains members  of  class
  type   and   is   initialized  by  a  brace-enclosed  initializer-list
  (_dcl.init.aggr_),  each  such   member   is   copy-initialized   (see
  _dcl.init_)  by the corresponding assignment-expression.  If there are
  fewer initializers in the initializer-list than members of the  aggre­
  gate, each member not explicitly initialized shall be copy-initialized
  (_dcl.init_) with an initializer of the form  T()  (_expr.type.conv_),
  where  T  represents  the  type  of  the uninitialized member.  [Note:
  _dcl.init.aggr_ describes how assignment-expressions  in  an  initial­
  izer-list  are  paired  with the aggregate members they initialize.  ]
  [Example:
          complex v[6] = { 1,complex(1,2),complex(),2 };
  Here, complex::complex(double) is called  for  the  initialization  of
  v[0]  and v[3], complex::complex(double,double) is called for the ini­
  tialization of v[1], complex::complex() is called for the  initializa­
  tion v[2], v[4], and v[5].  For another example,
          class X {
          public:
                  int i;
                  float f;
                  complex c;
          } x = { 99, 88.8, 77.7 };
  Here,  x.i  is  initialized with 99, x.f is initialized with 88.8, and
  complex::complex(double) is called for the initialization of  x.c.   ]
  [Note: braces can be elided in the initializer-list for any aggregate,
  even if the aggregate has members of a class  type  with  user-defined
  type conversions; see _dcl.init.aggr_.  ]

3 [Note:  if T is a class type with no default constructor, any declara­
  tion of an object of type T (or array thereof)  is  ill-formed  if  no
  initializer is explicitly specified (see _class.init_ and _dcl.init_).
  ]

4 [Note: the order in which objects with  static  storage  duration  are
  initialized is described in _basic.start.init_ and _stmt.dcl_.  ]

  12.6.2  Initializing bases and members               [class.base.init]

1 In  the  definition  of  a  constructor  for a class, initializers for
  direct and virtual base subobjects and nonstatic data members  can  be
  specified by a ctor-initializer, which has the form
          ctor-initializer:
                  : mem-initializer-list
          mem-initializer-list:
                  mem-initializer
                  mem-initializer , mem-initializer-list
          mem-initializer:
                  mem-initializer-id ( expression-listopt )
          mem-initializer-id:
                  ::opt nested-name-specifieropt class-name
                  identifier

2 Names  in  a mem-initializer-id are looked up in the scope of the con­
  structor's class and, if not found in that scope, are looked up in the

  scope  containing  the  constructor's definition.  Unless the mem-ini­
  tializer-id names a nonstatic data member of the  constructor's  class
  or a direct or virtual base of that class, the mem-initializer is ill-
  formed.  A mem-initializer-list can initialize a base class using  any
  name that denotes that base class type.  [Example:
          struct A { A(); };
          typedef A global_A;
          struct B { };
          struct C: public A, public B { C(); };
          C::C(): global_A() { }    // mem-initializer for base A
   --end example] If a mem-initializer-id is ambiguous because it desig­
  nates both a direct non-virtual base class and  an  inherited  virtual
  base class, the mem-initializer is ill-formed.  [Example:
          struct A { A(); };
          struct B: public virtual A { };
          struct C: public A, public B { C(); };
          C::C(): A() { }           // ill-formed: which A?
    --end  example]  A  ctor-initializer may initialize the member of an
  anonymous union that is a member of the  constructor's  class.   If  a
  ctor-initializer  specifies more than one mem-initializer for the same
  member, for the same base class or for multiple members  of  the  same
  union (including members of anonymous unions), the ctor-initializer is
  ill-formed.

3 The expression-list in a mem-initializer is  used  to  initialize  the
  base  class or nonstatic data member subobject denoted by the mem-ini­
  tializer-id.  The semantics of a mem-initializer are as follows:

  --if the expression-list of the mem-initializer is omitted,  the  base
    class or member subobject is default-initialized (see _dcl.init_);

  --otherwise,  the subobject indicated by mem-initializer-id is direct-
    initialized  using   expression-list   as   the   initializer   (see
    _dcl.init_).

  [Example:
          struct B1 { B1(int); /* ... */ };
          struct B2 { B2(int); /* ... */ };
          struct D : B1, B2 {
              D(int);
              B1 b;
              const c;
          };
          D::D(int a) : B2(a+1), B1(a+2), c(a+3), b(a+4)
          { /* ... */ }
          D d(10);
    --end  example]  There is a sequence point (_intro.execution_) after
  the initialization of each base and member.  The expression-list of  a
  mem-initializer is evaluated as part of the initialization of the cor­
  responding base or member.

4 If a given nonstatic data member or base class is not named by a  mem-
  initializer-id in the mem-initializer-list, then

  --If  the entity is a nonstatic data member of (possibly cv-qualified)
    class type (or array thereof) or a base class, and the entity  class
    is  a non-POD class, the entity is default-initialized (_dcl.init_).
    If the entity is a nonstatic data member of a const-qualified  type,
    the entity class shall have a user-declared default constructor.

  +-------                      BEGIN BOX 2                     -------+
  the old wording did not distinguish between implicit and user-declared
  default constructors; the distinction has been added  for  consistency
  with  _dcl.init_  and _expr.new_.  That means a member with an implic­
  itly-declared  default  constructor,  formerly  valid  here,  is   now
  invalid.
  +-------                       END BOX 2                      -------+

  --Otherwise,  the  entity  is  not  initialized.   If the entity is of
    const-qualified type or reference type, or of a (possibly  cv-quali­
    fied)  POD  class  type  (or  array thereof) containing (directly or
    indirectly) a member of a const-qualified type, the program is  ill-
    formed.

  After the call to a constructor for class X has completed, if a member
  of X is neither specified in the constructor's  mem-initializers,  nor
  default-initialized,  nor  initialized during execution of the body of
  the constructor, the member has indeterminate value.

5 Initialization shall proceed in the following order:

  --First, and only for the constructor of the  most  derived  class  as
    described  below,  virtual  base classes shall be initialized in the
    order they appear on a depth-first left-to-right  traversal  of  the
    directed acyclic graph of base classes, where "left-to-right" is the
    order of appearance of the base class names  in  the  derived  class
    base-specifier-list.

  --Then,  direct base classes shall be initialized in declaration order
    as they appear in the base-specifier-list (regardless of  the  order
    of the mem-initializers).

  --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).

  --Finally, the body of the constructor is executed.

  [Note:  the declaration order is mandated to ensure that base and mem­
  ber subobjects are destroyed in the reverse order  of  initialization.
  ]

6 All  sub-objects  representing virtual base classes are initialized by
  the constructor of the most derived class  (_intro.object_).   If  the
  constructor  of the most derived class does not specify a mem-initial­
  izer for a virtual base class  V,  then  V's  default  constructor  is
  called  to initialize the virtual base class subobject.  If V does not

  have an accessible default constructor,  the  initialization  is  ill-
  formed.   A  mem-initializer  naming  a  virtual  base  class shall be
  ignored during execution of the constructor of any class that  is  not
  the most derived class.  [Example:
          class V {
          public:
              V();
              V(int);
              // ...
          };
          class A : public virtual V {
          public:
              A();
              A(int);
              // ...
          };
          class B : public virtual V {
          public:
              B();
              B(int);
              // ...
          };
          class C : public A, public B, private virtual V {
          public:
              C();
              C(int);
              // ...
          };
          A::A(int i) : V(i) { /* ... */ }
          B::B(int i) { /* ... */ }
          C::C(int i) { /* ... */ }
          V v(1); // use V(int)
          A a(2); // use V(int)
          B b(3); // use V()
          C c(4); // use V()
   --end example]

7 Names in the expression-list of a mem-initializer are evaluated in the
  scope of the constructor for which the mem-initializer  is  specified.
  [Example:
          class X {
              int a;
              int b;
              int i;
              int j;
          public:
              const int& r;
              X(int i): r(a), b(i), i(i), j(this->i) {}
          };
  initializes  X::r to refer to X::a, initializes X::b with the value of
  the constructor parameter i, initializes X::i with the  value  of  the
  constructor  parameter i, and initializes X::j with the value of X::i;
  this takes place each time an object of class X is created.  ]  [Note:
  because  the  mem-initializer  are  evaluated  in  the  scope  of  the

  constructor, the this pointer can be used in the expression-list of  a
  mem-initializer to refer to the object being initialized.  ]

8 Member functions (including virtual member functions, _class.virtual_)
  can be called for an object under construction.  Similarly, an  object
  under   construction  can  be  the  operand  of  the  typeid  operator
  (_expr.typeid_) or of a dynamic_cast (_expr.dynamic.cast_).   However,
  if these operations are performed in a ctor-initializer (or in a func­
  tion called directly or indirectly from a ctor-initializer) before all
  the  mem-initializers  for  base classes have completed, the result of
  the operation is undefined.  [Example:
          class A {
          public:
                  A(int);
          };
          class B : public A {
                  int j;
          public:
                  int f();
                  B() : A(f()),   // undefined: calls member function
                                  // but base A not yet initialized
                  j(f()) { }      // well-defined: bases are all initialized
          };
          class C {
          public:
                  C(int);
          };
          class D : public B, C {
                  int i;
          public:
                  D() : C(f()),   // undefined: calls member function
                                  // but base C not yet initialized
                  i(f()) {}       // well-defined: bases are all initialized
          };
   --end example]

9 [Note: _class.cdtor_ describes the result of virtual  function  calls,
  typeid  and  dynamic_casts  during  construction  for the well-defined
  cases; that is, describes the polymorphic behavior of an object  under
  construction.  ]

  12.7  Construction and destruction                       [class.cdtor]

1 For  an object of non-POD class type (_class_), before the constructor
  begins execution and after the destructor finishes  execution,  refer­
  ring  to  any  nonstatic member or base class of the object results in
  undefined behavior.  [Example:
          struct X { int i; };
          struct Y : X { };
          struct A { int a; };
          struct B : public A { int j; Y y; };

          extern B bobj;
          B* pb = &bobj;          // ok
          int* p1 = &bobj.a;      // undefined, refers to base class member
          int* p2 = &bobj.y.i;    // undefined, refers to member's member
          A* pa = &bobj;          // undefined, upcast to a base class type
          B bobj;                 // definition of bobj
          extern X xobj;
          int* p3 = &xobj.i;      // Ok, X is a POD class
          X xobj;
  For another example,
          struct W { int j; };
          struct X : public virtual W { };
          struct Y {
                  int *p;
                  X x;
                  Y() : p(&x.j)    // undefined, x is not yet constructed
                  { }
          };
   --end example]

2 To explicitly or implicitly convert a pointer (an lvalue) referring to
  an  object of class X to a pointer (reference) to a direct or indirect
  base class B of X, the construction of X and the construction  of  all
  of  its  direct  or  indirect bases that directly or indirectly derive
  from B shall have started and the destruction of these  classes  shall
  not  have  completed,  otherwise  the  conversion results in undefined
  behavior.  To form a pointer to (or access the value of) a direct non­
  static  member  of  an  object obj, the construction of obj shall have
  started and its destruction shall not have  completed,  otherwise  the
  computation  of  the  pointer  value  (or  accessing the member value)
  results in undefined behavior.  [Example:
          struct A { };
          struct B : virtual A { };
          struct C : B { };
          struct D : virtual A { D(A*); };
          struct X { X(A*); };
          struct E : C, D, X {
                  E() : D(this),  // undefined: upcast from E* to A*
                                  // might use path E* -> D* -> A*
                                  // but D is not constructed
                  // D((C*)this), // defined:
                                  // E* -> C* defined because E() has started
                                  // and C* -> A* defined because
                                  // C fully constructed
                  X(this)         // defined: upon construction of X,
                                  // C/B/D/A sublattice is fully constructed
                  { }
          };
   --end example]

3 Member functions, including virtual functions  (_class.virtual_),  can
  be  called  during  construction  or  destruction (_class.base.init_).
  When a virtual function is called directly or indirectly from  a  con­
  structor  (including  from  the  mem-initializer for a data member) or

  from  a  destructor,  and  the object to which the call applies is the
  object under construction or destruction, the function called  is  the
  one  defined in the constructor or destructor's own class or in one of
  its bases, but not a function overriding it in a  class  derived  from
  the  constructor or destructor's class, or overriding it in one of the
  other base classes of the most derived  object  (_intro.object_).   If
  the  virtual  function  call  uses  an  explicit  class  member access
  (_expr.ref_) and the object-expression refers to the object under con­
  struction  or  destruction  but its type is neither the constructor or
  destructor's own class or one of its bases, the result of the call  is
  undefined.  [Example:
          class V {
          public:
                  virtual void f();
                  virtual void g();
          };
          class A : public virtual V {
          public:
                  virtual void f();
          };
          class B : public virtual V {
          public:
                  virtual void g();
                  B(V*, A*);
          };
          class D : public A, B {
          public:
                  virtual void f();
                  virtual void g();
                  D() : B((A*)this, this) { }
          };
          B::B(V* v, A* a) {
                  f();    // calls V::f, not A::f
                  g();    // calls B::g, not D::g
                  v->g(); // v is base of B, the call is well-defined, calls B::g
                  a->f(); // undefined behavior, a's type not a base of B
          }
   --end example]

4 The typeid operator (_expr.typeid_) can be used during construction or
  destruction (_class.base.init_).  When typeid is used in a constructor
  (including  from  the  mem-initializer  for  a  data  member)  or in a
  destructor, or used in a function called (directly or indirectly) from
  a  constructor  or  destructor, if the operand of typeid refers to the
  object under construction or destruction, typeid yields the  type_info
  representing the constructor or destructor's class.  If the operand of
  typeid refers to the object under construction or destruction and  the
  static  type of the operand is neither the constructor or destructor's
  class nor one of its bases, the result of typeid is undefined.

5 Dynamic_casts (_expr.dynamic.cast_) can be used during construction or
  destruction (_class.base.init_). When a dynamic_cast is used in a con­
  structor (including from the mem-initializer for a data member) or  in
  a  destructor,  or  used in a function called (directly or indirectly)

  from a constructor or destructor, if the operand of  the  dynamic_cast
  refers to the object under construction or destruction, this object is
  considered to be a most derived object that has the type of  the  con­
  structor  or  destructor's  class.  If the operand of the dynamic_cast
  refers to the object under construction or destruction and the  static
  type  of  the operand is not a pointer to or object of the constructor
  or destructor's own class  or  one  of  its  bases,  the  dynamic_cast
  results in undefined behavior.

6 [Example:
          class V {
          public:
                  virtual void f();
          };
          class A : public virtual V { };
          class B : public virtual V {
          public:
                  B(V*, A*);
          };
          class D : public A, B {
          public:
                  D() : B((A*)this, this) { }
          };
          B::B(V* v, A* a) {
                  typeid(*this);  // type_info for B
                  typeid(*v);     // well-defined: *v has type V, a base of B
                                  // yields type_info for B
                  typeid(*a);     // undefined behavior: type A not a base of B
                  dynamic_cast<B*>(v); // well-defined: v of type V*, V base of B
                                  // results in B*
                  dynamic_cast<B*>(a); // undefined behavior,
                                  // a has type A*, A not a base of B
          }
   --end example]

  12.8  Copying class objects                               [class.copy]

1 A   class  object  can  be  copied  in  two  ways,  by  initialization
  (_class.ctor_, _dcl.init_), including for  function  argument  passing
  (_expr.call_)  and  for  function value return (_stmt.return_), and by
  assignment  (_expr.ass_).   Conceptually,  these  two  operations  are
  implemented  by  a copy constructor (_class.ctor_) and copy assignment
  operator (_over.ass_).

2 A constructor for class X is a copy constructor if its first parameter
  is  of type X&, const X&, volatile X& or const volatile X&, and either
  there are no other  parameters  or  else  all  other  parameters  have
  default  arguments  (_dcl.fct.default_).  [Example: X::X(const X&) and
  X::X(X&, int=1) are copy constructors.

          class X {
              // ...
          public:
              X(int);
              X(const X&, int = 1);
          };
          X a(1);         // calls X(int);
          X b(a, 0);      // calls X(const X&, int);
          X c = b;        // calls X(const X&, int);
   --end example] [Note: all forms of copy constructor may  be  declared
  for a class.  [Example:
          class X {
                  // ...
          public:
                  X(const X&);
                  X(X&); // OK
          };
    --end example]  --end note] [Note: if a class X only has a copy con­
  structor with a parameter of type X&, an initializer of type  const  X
  or volatile X cannot initialize an object of type (possibily cv-quali­
  fied) X.  [Example:
          struct X {
                  X();    // default constructor
                  X(X&);  // copy constructor with a nonconst parameter
          };
          const X cx;
          X x = cx;       // error -- X::X(X&) cannot copy cx into x
   --end example]  --end note]

3 A declaration of a constructor for a class  X  is  ill-formed  if  its
  first  parameter  is  of  type  (optionally cv-qualified) X and either
  there are no other  parameters  or  else  all  other  parameters  have
  default arguments.

4 If  the  class definition does not explicitly declare a copy construc­
  tor, one is declared implicitly.  Thus, for the class definition
          struct X {
                  X(const X&, int);
          };
  a copy constructor is implicitly-declared.  If the user-declared  con­
  structor is later defined as
          X::X(const X& x, int i =0) { /* ... */ }
  then  any  use  of  X's  copy constructor is ill-formed because of the
  ambiguity; no diagnostic is required.

5 The implicitly-declared copy constructor for a class X will  have  the
  form
          X::X(const X&)
  if

  --each  direct  or  virtual  base  class B of X has a copy constructor
    whose first parameter is of type const B& or const volatile B&, and

  --for all the nonstatic data members of X that are of a class  type  M

    (or  array  thereof),  each  such  class type has a copy constructor
    whose first parameter is of type const M& or const volatile M&.4)

  Otherwise, the implicitly declared copy constructor will have the form
          X::X(X&)
  An  implicitly-declared copy constructor is an inline public member of
  its class.

6 A copy constructor for class X is trivial if it is implicitly declared
  and if

  --class  X  has  no virtual functions (_class.virtual_) and no virtual
    base classes (_class.mi_), and

  --each direct base class of X has a trivial copy constructor, and

  --for all the nonstatic data members of X that are of class  type  (or
    array thereof), each such class type has a trivial copy constructor;

  otherwise the copy constructor is non-trivial.

7 An implicitly-declared copy constructor is implicitly defined if it is
  used  to  initialize  an  object  of  its class type from a copy of an
  object of its class type or of a class type  derived  from  its  class
  type5).  [Note: the copy constructor is implicitly defined even if the
  implementation  elided  its  use  (_class.temporary_).  ] A program is
  ill-formed if the class for which a  copy  constructor  is  implicitly
  defined has:

  --a  nonstatic  data  member  of class type (or array thereof) with an
    inaccessible or ambiguous copy constructor, or

  --a base class with an inaccessible or ambiguous copy constructor.

  Before the implicitly-declared copy constructor for a class is implic­
  itly defined, all implicitly-declared copy constructors for its direct
  and virtual base classes and its nonstatic  data  members  shall  have
  been implicitly defined.  [Note: an implicitly-declared copy construc­
  tor has an exception-specification (_except.spec_).  ]

8 The implicitly-defined copy constructor for class X performs a member­
  wise  copy of its subobjects.  The order of copying is the same as the
  order of initialization of bases and members in  a  user-defined  con­
  structor  (see  _class.base.init_).   Each  subobject is copied in the
  manner appropriate to its type:

  --if the subobject is of class type,  the  copy  constructor  for  the
    class is used;
  _________________________
  4) This implies that the reference  parameter  of  the  implicitly-de­
  clared  copy  constructor  cannot  bind  to  a  volatile  lvalue;  see
  _diff.special_.
  5)  See _dcl.init_ for more details on direct and copy initialization.

  --if  the subobject is an array, each element is copied, in the manner
    appropriate to the element type;

  --if the subobject is of scalar type, the built-in assignment operator
    is used.

  Virtual base class subobjects shall be copied only once by the implic­
  itly-defined copy constructor (see _class.base.init_).

9 A user-declared copy assignment operator X::operator= is a  non-static
  member  function  of class X with exactly one parameter of type X, X&,
  const X&, volatile X& or const  volatile  X&.   [Note:  an  overloaded
  assignment  operator  must be declared to have only one parameter; see
  _over.ass_.  ] [Note: more than one form of copy  assignment  operator
  may  be  declared  for a class.  ] [Note: if a class X only has a copy
  assignment operator with a parameter of type X&, an expression of type
  const X cannot be assigned to an object of type X.  [Example:
          struct X {
                  X();
                  X& operator=(X&);
          };
          const X cx;
          X x;
          void f() {
                  x = cx; // error:
                          // X::operator=(X&) cannot assign cx into x
          }
   --end example]  --end note]

10If  the class definition does not explicitly declare a copy assignment
  operator, one is declared implicitly.   The  implicitly-declared  copy
  assignment operator for a class X will have the form
          X& X::operator=(const X&)
  if

  --each  direct  base class B of X has a copy assignment operator whose
    parameter is of type const B&, const volatile B& or B, and

  --for all the nonstatic data members of X that are of a class  type  M
    (or array thereof), each such class type has a copy assignment oper­
    ator whose parameter is of type const M&, const volatile M& or M.6)

  Otherwise, the implicitly declared copy constructor will have the form
          X& X::operator=(X&)
  The  implicitly-declared  copy assignment operator for class X has the
  return type X&; it returns the object for which the assignment  opera­
  tor  is  invoked,  that  is,  the  object assigned to.  An implicitly-
  declared copy assignment operator is an inline public  member  of  its
  class.   Because a copy assignment operator is implicitly declared for
  _________________________
  6) This implies that the reference  parameter  of  the  implicitly-de­
  clared  copy assignment operator cannot bind to a volatile lvalue; see
  _diff.special_.

  a class if not declared by the user,  a  base  class  copy  assignment
  operator is always hidden by the copy assignment operator of a derived
  class (_over.ass_).

11A copy assignment operator for class X is trivial if it is  implicitly
  declared and if

  --class  X  has  no virtual functions (_class.virtual_) and no virtual
    base classes (_class.mi_), and

  --each direct base class of X has a trivial copy assignment  operator,
    and

  --for  all  the nonstatic data members of X that are of class type (or
    array thereof), each such class type has a trivial  copy  assignment
    operator;

  otherwise the copy assignment operator is non-trivial.

12An  implicitly-declared copy assignment operator is implicitly defined
  when an object of its class type is assigned a value of its class type
  or  a value of a class type derived from its class type.  A program is
  ill-formed if the class  for  which  a  copy  assignment  operator  is
  implicitly defined has:

  --a nonstatic data member of const type, or

  --a nonstatic data member of reference type, or

  --a  nonstatic  data  member  of class type (or array thereof) with an
    inaccessible copy assignment operator, or

  --a base class with an inaccessible copy assignment operator.

  Before the implicitly-declared copy assignment operator for a class is
  implicitly  defined, all implicitly-declared copy assignment operators
  for its direct base classes and its nonstatic data members shall  have
  been  implicitly  defined.  [Note: an implicitly-declared copy assign­
  ment operator has an exception-specification (_except.spec_).  ]

13The implicitly-defined copy assignment operator for class  X  performs
  memberwise assignment of its subobjects.  The direct base classes of X
  are assigned first, in the order of their  declaration  in  the  base-
  specifier-list, and then the immediate nonstatic data members of X are
  assigned, in the order in which they were declared in the class  defi­
  nition.   Each  subobject is assigned in the manner appropriate to its
  type:

  --if the subobject is of class type, the copy assignment operator  for
    the class is used;

  --if  the subobject is an array, each element is assigned, in the man­
    ner appropriate to the element type;

  --if the subobject is of scalar type, the built-in assignment operator
    is used.

  It is unspecified whether subobjects representing virtual base classes
  are assigned more than once by the implicitly-defined copy  assignment
  operator.  [Example:
          struct V { };
          struct A : virtual V { };
          struct B : virtual V { };
          struct C : B, A { };
  it  is  unspecified  whether  the  virtual  base  class subobject V is
  assigned twice by the implicitly-defined copy assignment operator  for
  C.   --end example]

14A program is ill-formed if the copy constructor or the copy assignment
  operator for an object is implicitly used and the special member func­
  tion  is  not  accessible (_class.access_).  [Note: Copying one object
  into another using the copy constructor or the copy assignment  opera­
  tor does not change the layout or size of either object.  ]

15Whenever a class object is copied and the original object and the copy
  have the same type, if the implementation can prove  that  either  the
  original  object  or  the  copy will never again be used except as the
  result of an implicit destructor call (_class.dtor_),  an  implementa­
  tion  is permitted to treat the original and the copy as two different
  ways of referring to the same object and not perform a  copy  at  all.
  In  that  case, the object is destroyed at the later of times when the
  original  and  the  copy  would  have  been  destroyed   without   the
  optimization.7) [Example:
          class Thing {
          public:
                  Thing();
                  ~Thing();
                  Thing(const Thing&);
                  Thing operator=(const Thing&);
                  void fun();
          };
          void f(Thing t) { }
          void g(Thing t) { t.fun(); }

          int main()
          {
                  Thing t1, t2, t3;
                  f(t1);
                  g(t2);
                  g(t3);
                  t3.fun();
          }
  Here  t1  does not need to be copied when calling f because f does not
  _________________________
  7)  Because  only one object is destroyed instead of two, and one copy
  constructor is not executed, there is still one object  destroyed  for
  each one constructed.

  use its formal parameter again after copying it. Although g  uses  its
  parameter,  the  call  to g(t2) does not need to copy t2 because t2 is
  not used again after it is passed to g.  On the other hand, t3 is used
  after passing it to g so calling g(t3) is required to copy t3.  ]