4

A simple C++ question : is it possible to call a function or another based on the runtime type of a pointer?

For example I have a class A, and class B is a child of A.

I want to write a function f such that

f(A* a)
{//do something
}
f(B* b)
{//do something else
}

//call f()
A* a = new A();
A* b = new B();
f(a);//do something
f(b);//do something, but I'd like it to "do something else"

Additional precision : A and B are defined and instanced out of my code, so I can't use regular polymorphism with virtual functions on A and B...

I know you can use some RTTI, but is there a more elegant solution?

1
  • A and B are defined and instanced out of my code > do you mean that the variables of type A or B are instanciated outside your code ? Aug 21, 2012 at 12:55

4 Answers 4

5

You may achieve that using dynamic_cast:

f(A* a)
{
B* b = dynamic_cast<B*>(a);
if (b == nullptr)
//do something
else
//do something else
}
6
  • Actually, when I was talking about RTTI, I thought about calling typeid, a dynamic_cast looks better, even if it's still not as elegant as virtual functions in the classes themselves..
    – Mikarnage
    Aug 21, 2012 at 12:45
  • @Mikarnage pretty much the same thing. Aug 21, 2012 at 12:45
  • @LuchianGrigore: not quite though, dynamic_cast will work if it is a C, derived from B, while typeid would only indicate pure B. Of course, dynamic_cast may end up being more costly as a result... Aug 21, 2012 at 12:53
  • 1
    The OP doesn't say that A and B are polymorphic classes, and if they aren't dynamic_cast won't work here (there won't be any solution in that case).
    – Mark B
    Aug 21, 2012 at 13:11
  • 2
    @Andrey: Yes, but to be polymorphic, A must have at least one virtual function. Aug 21, 2012 at 13:39
5

With those constraints (can't modify the classes), and without using RTTI, no.

You could use a decorator pattern, wrap A and B in some other classes and make f take those as parameters, but that seems like overkill.

1

That has nothing to do with polymorphism. f(A*) and f(B*) aren't the same function, they just happen to have the same identifier. The compiler will pick which one to use. Without RTTI of some sort you can't do this in C++.

0
0

If I understand your question correctly, you are looking for multimethods. C++ doesn't provide multimethods as a language feature although there is an experimental extension, written by Bjarne Stroustrup. You can use the Visitor pattern as a workaround. A very detailed article on multimethods in C++: MultiMethods in C++: Finding a complete solution

1
  • While generally good advise, the fact that the OP may not alter the original A and B classes pretty much rules out the use of the Visitor pattern. Aug 21, 2012 at 12:54

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