I'd like to set up a function pointer as a member of a class that is a pointer to another function in the same class. The reasons why I'm doing this are complicated.
In this example, I would like the output to be "1"
class A {
public:
int f();
int (*x)();
}
int A::f() {
return 1;
}
int main() {
A a;
a.x = a.f;
printf("%d\n",a.x())
}
But this fails at compiling. Why?
The syntax is wrong. A member pointer is a different type category from a ordinary pointer. The member pointer will have to be used together with an object of its class:
class A {
public:
int f();
int (A::*x)(); // <- declare by saying what class it is a pointer to
};
int A::f() {
return 1;
}
int main() {
A a;
a.x = &A::f; // use the :: syntax
printf("%d\n",(a.*(a.x))()); // use together with an object of its class
}
a.x
does not yet say on what object the function is to be called on. It just says that you want to use the pointer stored in the object a
. Prepending a
another time as the left operand to the .*
operator will tell the compiler on what object to call the function on.