Unreal Engine 4 Scripting with C++ Cookbook
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Unreal's garbage collection system and UPROPERTY( )

When you have an object (such as TArray< >) as a UPROPERTY() member of UCLASS(), you need to declare that member as UPROPERTY() (even if you won't edit it in blueprints), otherwise TArray will not stay allocated properly.

How to do it...

Say we have a UCLASS() macro as follows:

UCLASS()
class MYPROJECT_API AWarrior : public AActor
{
  //TArray< FSoundEffect > Greets; // Incorrect
  UPROPERTY() TArray< FSoundEffect > Greets; // Correct
};

You'd have to list the TArray member as UPROPERTY() for it to be properly reference counted. If you don't do so, you'll get an unexpected memory error type bug sitting about in the code.

How it works…

The UPROPERTY() declaration tells UE4 that TArray must be properly memory managed. Without the UPROPERTY() declaration, your TArray won't work properly.