unaryOperators& operator++ (unaryOperators &one)
^^
is the non-member prefix unary increment operator.
The non-member postfix unary increment operator takes an additional int
as an policy enforcing parameter.
unaryOperators operator++ (unaryOperators &one, int)
Reference:
C++03 Standard 13.5.7 Increment and decrement [over.inc]
The user-defined function called operator++ implements the prefix and postfix ++ operator. If this function is a member function with no parameters, or a non-member function with one parameter of class or enumeration type, it defines the prefix increment operator ++ for objects of that type. If the function is a member function with one parameter (which shall be of type int
) or a non-member function with two parameters (the second of which shall be of type int
), it defines the postfix increment operator ++ for objects of that type. When the postfix increment is called as a result of using the ++ operator, the int argument will have value zero.125)
[Example:
class X {
public:
X& operator++(); // prefix ++a
X operator++(int); // postfix a++
};
class Y { };
Y& operator++(Y&); // prefix ++b
Y operator++(Y&, int); // postfix b++
void f(X a, Y b) {
++a; // a.operator++();
a++; // a.operator++(0);
++b; // operator++(b);
b++; // operator++(b, 0);
a.operator++(); // explicit call: like ++a;
a.operator++(0); // explicit call: like a++;
operator++(b); //explicit call: like ++b;
operator++(b, 0); // explicit call: like b++;
}
—end example]
unaryOperators operator++ (unaryOperators &one)
, created objectunaryOperators a
and trieda++; ++a;
and both printed the added log!. Interesting