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Chapter 10

Exceptions, RAII, Smart Pointers, and Resource Management

Master one of the most important practical areas of C++: managing memory and resources safely using RAII and modern ownership tools.

Inside this chapter

  1. Exception Handling
  2. RAII Principle
  3. Smart Pointers
  4. Avoiding Manual new and delete
  5. Resource Types Beyond Memory
  6. Real-World Usage Snapshot

Series navigation

Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from C++ basics to modern ownership, templates, concurrency, performance, and production-ready engineering practices. Use the navigation at the bottom to move smoothly through the full series.

Tutorial Home

Chapter 10

Exception Handling

try {
    throw std::runtime_error("Something went wrong");
} catch (const std::exception &ex) {
    std::cout << ex.what() << '\n';
}

Exceptions separate error-handling flow from main logic, but they must be used consistently and with awareness of library and project style.

Chapter 10

RAII Principle

RAII stands for Resource Acquisition Is Initialization. It means resources are tied to object lifetime. When the object is created, it acquires the resource. When the object is destroyed, it releases it automatically. This is one of the most powerful safety ideas in C++.

Chapter 10

Smart Pointers

#include <memory>

std::unique_ptr<int> value = std::make_unique<int>(42);

std::unique_ptr represents exclusive ownership. std::shared_ptr supports shared ownership. Students should learn ownership intent clearly rather than choosing smart pointers blindly.

Chapter 10

Avoiding Manual new and delete

Modern C++ code often avoids raw new and delete in application logic. Smart pointers, containers, and value semantics reduce memory bugs and make ownership clearer.

Chapter 10

Resource Types Beyond Memory

RAII applies not just to memory, but also to files, locks, sockets, handles, and database connections. The broader lesson is deterministic cleanup through object lifetime.

Chapter 10

Real-World Usage Snapshot

Resource management is one of the most practical reasons C++ can be both efficient and safe when used well. RAII and smart pointers are essential in large codebases, libraries, engines, and systems software.

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