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I expected A::~A() to be called in this program, but it isn't:

#include <iostream>

struct A {
  ~A() { std::cout << "~A()" << std::endl; }
};

void f() {
  A a;
  throw "spam";
}

int main() { f(); }

However, if I change last line to

int main() try { f(); } catch (...) { throw; }

then A::~A() is called.

I am compiling with "Microsoft (R) 32-bit C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 14.00.50727.762 for 80x86" from Visual Studio 2005. Command line is cl /EHa my.cpp.

Is compiler right as usual? What does standard say on this matter?

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1 Answer

The destructor is not being called because terminate() for the unhandled exception is called before the stack gets unwound.

The specific details of what the C++ spec says is outside of my knowledge, but a debug trace with gdb and g++ seems to bear this out.

According to the draft standard section 15.3 bullet 9:

9 If no matching handler is found in a program, the function terminate()
  (_except.terminate_)  is  called.  Whether or not the stack is unwound
  before calling terminate() is implementation-defined.

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