Function which returns an unknown type

Jacob picture Jacob · Aug 31, 2009 · Viewed 10.5k times · Source
class Test
{
public:

 SOMETHING DoIt(int a)
 {
  float FLOAT = 1.2;
  int INT = 2;
  char CHAR = 'a';

  switch(a)
  {
  case 1: return INT;
  case 2: return FLOAT;
  case 3: return CHAR;
  }
 }
};


int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{  
 Test obj;
 cout<<obj.DoIt(1);    
    return 0;
}

Now, using the knowledge that a = 1 implies that I need to return an integer, etc., is there anyway Doit() can return a variable of variable data type?

Essentially, with what do I replace SOMETHING ?

PS: I'm trying to find a an alternative to returning a structure/union containing these data types.

Answer

AraK picture AraK · Aug 31, 2009

You can use boost::any or boost::variant to do what you want. I recommend boost::variant because you know the collection of types you want to return.


This is a very simple example, though you can do much more with variant. Check the reference for more examples :)

#include "boost/variant.hpp"
#include <iostream>

typedef boost::variant<char, int, double> myvariant;

myvariant fun(int value)
{
 if(value == 0)
 {
  return 1001;
 }
 else if(value  == 1)
 {
  return 3.2;
 }
  return 'V';
}

int main()
{
 myvariant v = fun(0);
 std::cout << v << std::endl;

 v = fun(1);
 std::cout << v << std::endl;

 v = fun(54151);
 std::cout << v << std::endl;
}

The output:

1001
3.2
V

I would use boost::variant instead of a union because you can't use non-POD types inside union. Also, boost::any is great if you don't know the type you are dealing with. Otherwise, I would use boost::variant because it is much more efficient and safer.


Answering the edited question: If you don't want to ship Boost with your code, take a look at bcp. The description of bcp from the same link:

The bcp utility is a tool for extracting subsets of Boost, it's useful for Boost authors who want to distribute their library separately from Boost, and for Boost users who want to distribute a subset of Boost with their application.

bcp can also report on which parts of Boost your code is dependent on, and what licences are used by those dependencies.