4

I have a piece of code that requires passing a function object (functional). I can't use function pointers because I need to store some state variables. Let's say I have quite a few state variables. Is it ok to pass the function object by reference? I've only seen function objects passed by value. This is what my code will look like:

struct FunctionObject {
    double a, b, x, y;
    double operator() (int v, int w) {....}
};

template <class T>
Class MyClass {
     T& func;
     .....
public:
     MyClass(T& func):func(func) {}
     .....
};
1
  • 6
    Yes that's perfectly fine. Just be careful that the lifetime of your function object surpasses the lifetime of your reference to it. Of course, that advice is not unique to function objects. Nov 14, 2012 at 16:31

4 Answers 4

7

Passing function objects by reference is fine, but you should be aware that many C++ algorithms copy function objects, so if you need a library algorithm to respect your state you should pass it as a reference inside your function object:

struct State {
    double a, b, x, y;
};
struct Function {
    State &state;
    explicit Function(State &state): state(state) {}
    double operator() (int v, int w) {....}
};
State state;
std::...(..., Function(state), ...)

Also, some library algorithms (e.g. transform) require pre-C++11 that the function object have no side effects i.e. no state whatsoever; this requirement is rarely enforced and is relaxed in C++11.

1

It depends mainly on how you intend to instanciate FunctionObject (how you create function objects). If you use references, you must ensure the function object outlives the user (MyClass) object.

For instance:

MyClass* createObject() {
    MyFunction f(...);         // function object created
    return new MyClass(f);     // reference used
                               // function object destroyed => reference invalid
}

is incorrect because the returned object has a reference on a destroyed (invalid) function.

Since you gain very little by passing by reference (avoid copying a small object), it's not worth the hassle (checking objects lifetime) and the risk an oversight (bug)

0

The synthax is correct but...

  • most of the time you're going to call the function object later in your code, so you need to make sure that the reference you've provided in MyClass is still in the scope
  • so in the end since you need to keep the function object in the heap rahter than the stack, you'll have to create a pointer to it... so I recommend using a pointer...
0

Function objects are objects. You can pass them by reference and you can store references to them, subject to the usual lifetime issues. However, the algorithms in std:: are allowed to make copies of their function objects whenever they like, so any stored state may well be stale, so it may be better to write your function object as a wrapper around a pointer or reference to its state.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.