If you only has one error status, an enum
is OK. Just assign 0 to that only error status.
Otherwise you need a class
. But a class
cannot be used in switch
, you need a conversion operator to integer type (bool, int, chat, enum etc). Once you have such conversion operator defined, they have higher priority than "void*" when the context requires a bool value. If you define both int
and bool
operator, they will lead to bool conversion ambiguous. So you cannot use an object in both if
and switch
, except the only error status is converted to 0.
However, you can use the safe-bool idiom (do not use operator bool, which can be used in switch accidentally), and add a function to return enum, or integer for switch.
class Status {
public:
enum Code {
RUNNING = 1,
IDDLE = 2,
ERROR = -1,
STOPPED = -2
};
explicit Status(Code code) : code_(code) {}
bool ok() const { return code_ > 0; }
operator void*() const
{ return ok() ? const_cast<Status*>(this) : 0; }
bool operator!() const
{ return !ok(); }
Code code() const { return code_; }
private:
Code code_;
};
Status s(Status::STOPPED);
if (s) { .... }
switch (s.code()) { .... }