We should edit the wiki to include the other languages. The new
keyword in those languages looks like the new
keyword in C++, because C++ is a popular language that influenced other languages.
C++ new
is a keyword. I can't declare a variable int new;
, just as I can't declare int using;
or int while;
in C++. There is an operator
keyword that overloads operators, as in operator +
or operator <<
. C++ also uses operator
to overload new
, as operator new
. So we also say that C++ new
is an operator. The new
keyword and the new
operator are the same thing; there is no difference.
Other languages, like Java, may simplify new
. Java has no overloading of new
, so there is no operator new
syntax to overload it. Java new
is still an operator, because the operator looks the same in Java and C++:
Thing *x = new Thing(y); // C++
Thing x = new Thing(y); // Java
new-operator probably has more C++ questions than Java questions, because C++ has more complications (like overloading and placement new) that don't exist in Java. I see 7 highlighted questions under the tag info; 5 are C++ but 2 are other languages:
- Why should C++ programmers minimize use of 'new'? c++
- Do the parentheses after the type name make a difference with new? c++
- Passing arguments to C# generic new() of templated type c#
- Using "Object.create" instead of "new" javascript
- Why does the use of 'new' cause memory leaks? c++
- C++ new int[0] -- will it allocate memory? c++
- Why would one replace default new and delete operators? c++
All 7 questions have language tags, so we know if the question is about C++ or some other language. This allows C++ to share new-operator with other languages. JavaScript new
also sets the prototype of the object, which raises questions that don't exist in C++ or Java. Stack Overflow isn't only for C++.
Perl also had the new
operator:
use Math::BigInt;
my $bn = new Math::BigInt('42');
This new
isn't a keyword, but it looks like the operator in C++. This syntax has some problems and Perl now discourages it, but people do ask questions about it.