I'm writing a class where I am constantly adding new members (it's a prototype for a project) and I have implemented my own constructor, copy constructor, copy operator, etc... As I add more members I have to remind myself to keep adding them to the constructors and operators and I'm wondering if there is an automatic way of checking if I am including everything.
I implemented a simple solution that involves counting all members in the class declaration and then set up a #define with that value.
Class A
{
int a;
int b;
vector<int> c;
/*3 members*/
}
#define CLASS_A_MEMBERS 3
In the constructor I just do something like this
A::A( )
{
int counter=0;
a=1; counter++;
b=1; counter++;
c.clear(); counter++;
assert(counter==CLASS_A_MEMBERS)
}
Great! Whenever I forget to add something I get an assert and the offending place!
Ok, this works... but, is there a more elegant way of doing something like this?
Cheers
class C { int newMember = 5; };
-Wunintialized
doesn't warn for uninitialized class members, although I have a patch that mostly works, see gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=2972c.clear()
on a brand new, empty vector?-Weffc++
. I get it when I forget to add new members to my member initializers. Something likenewMember should be initialized in the member initializers
.