C++'s implicit copy and move behavior offer an excellent way to shoot yourself in the foot. Here's an example of how they can create a double-free and how to avoid it.
Simply taking std::string by value (as it is a memory management class created for that explicit purpose) would have solved the problem without kneecapping every class you make.
Better rules to take out if this than to delete all move and copy operators:
Simply taking std::string by value (as it is a memory management class created for that explicit purpose) would have solved the problem without kneecapping every class you make.
I think you are missing the whole point.
The blogger tried to make a point about how special member functions can be tricky to get right if you don't master them. In this case, the blogger even presents a concrete example of how the rule of 3/rule of 5 would fail to catch this issue. As the blogger was relying on the implicit special member functions to manage the life cycle of CheeseShop::clerkName and was oblivious to the possibility of copying values around, this resulted in the double free.
You can argue that you wouldn't have a problem if the string was used instead of a pointer to string, which is a point that the blogger indirectly does, but that would mean you'd be missing the root cause and missing the bigger picture, as you'd be trusting things to work by coincidence instead of actually knowing how they work.
The blogger also does a piss-poor job in advocating to explicitly delete move constructors, as that suggests he learned nothing from the ordeal. A preferable lesson would be to a) not use raw pointers and instead try to adopt a smart pointer with the relevant semantics, b) actually provide custom implementations for copy/move constructors/assignment operators whenever doing anything non-trivial to manage resources, such as handling raw pointers and needing to both copy them and free them whenever they stop being used.
You'd be missing the whole point too if you think that the pointer is the root cause. The problem is that the class is not designed to be copy-able, let alone moveable. Your suggestion to use a unique_ptr will also blow up in your face the moment you try to copy an instance.
Depends on what semantic you want. Sure, if you use a unique_ptr member, you will get a deleted copy constructor/operator - I wouldn't consider that blowing up in my face.
Naked pointers are just too stupid for modern C++ ;)
Anyone who works on real-world production software written in C++ knows for a fact that pointers are a reality.
Also, there are plenty of frameworks who employ their own memory management frameworks, and raw pointers are perfectly fine in that context. For example, Qt uses raw pointers extensively because It's object system implements an object ownership system where each object can have child and parents, and you can simply invoke deleteLater() to free the whole dependency tree when you no longer need it.
Yeah, that's confusing to read. A hashset can only contain at most one of each cheese kind, in c++20 you can write inventory.contains(cheeseName), before that you had to use .count or inventory.find(cheeseName) != inventory.end() or something like that