Just:
public SList<string> labels { get{return h_labels;} set{h_labels = value;} }
On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 12:44 AM, Yu Feng<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Mon, 2009-07-06 at 13:08 -0300, Lucas Hermann Negri wrote:
>> I didn't added anything to the list. Just created and destroyed the
>> class that had this property, and it leaked.
>
> How could it be? Could you post the code? I am confused.
>
> Yu
>>
>> On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 3:28 AM, Yu Feng<[email protected]> wrote:
>> > On Sun, 2009-07-05 at 00:55 -0300, Lucas Hermann Negri wrote:
>> >> Hello,
>> >>
>> >> I have a property of GLib.SList type, defined this way:
>> >>
>> >> "
>> >> public SList<string> labels { get{return h_labels;} set{h_labels =
>> >> value;} }
>> >> "
>> >>
>> >> But this leaks memory. What's the correct way of doing this?
>> > I don't think SList<string> itself comes with a leak: the list is
>> > properly destructed, so are the members. The leak does occur when one
>> > removes an element from the list -- in other words there won't be a leak
>> > if you merely use the list to hold the references and never remove
>> > anything from it.
>> >
>> >>
>> >> Also, how do I create a property of type string[]? I tried this way:
>> >>
>> >> "
>> >> public string[] test { get; set; }
>> >> "
>> >>
>> >> But the generated C code doesn't compiles.
>> >>
>> >> Another issue:
>> >>
>> >> I'm using a PangoLayout created using
>> >> Pango.cairo_create_layout(plot.cr), but I need to call unref() by hand
>> >> in the destructor. This is the correct behavior or just a bug in the
>> >> binding (other objects are managed automatically) ?
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Thanks for the attention.
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>
>
--
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