If you have an opaque pointer typedef, is there a way to dynamically refer to the pointed-to type, say, for use in templates? For instance, say you have something like this:
struct Foo; // Forward declared struct
typedef Foo* FooPtr; // Opaque pointer
Because the smart pointer types are templates in terms of the pointer-to type, to define a std::shared_ptr
of this, it seems that you have to say:
std::shared_ptr<struct Foo> theSharedPtr;
Is there any way to define such a pointer without "manually" unwrapping the opaque pointer typedef? I feel like I must be missing something obvious here, but you might imagine something like these (note: these do not work):
std::shared_ptr<*FooPtr> theSharedPointer;
// or
std::shared_ptr<pointedto(FooPtr)> theSharedPointer;
I feel like this should be possible. Am I missing something? I feel like this is an impending forehead-smacking moment...
EDIT: Noodling around some more, it appears that, in the common case, shared_ptr<T>
wants to take the sizeof(T)
. You can get around this by providing a deleter to the constructor. I suspect this makes this a bit of an edge case, but it still seems like with all the type wrangling in C++, I should be able to "unwrap" a pointer type without doing so by hand.