x
Hello,
i want to make a function call pointer in my GUI Button Class which is so flexible that i can call a function from multiple different classes:
class A
{
void funcTestA();
};
class B
{
void funcTestB();
};
class X
{
void (*_callback)(int); //In one X object is the funcTestA() pointer saved and in another X object the funcTestB() pointer
void callThem();
};
void X::callThem()
{
this->_callback();
}
It gave me an error that i need something similar like this:
void (A::*)()
or:
void (B::*)()
But i want that can use dynamically either the funcTestA pointer or the funcTestB pointer.
Is this even possible?
EDIT:
Ok i know that i need a reference Object to call the function like this:
A* pA;
(pA->callback)();
But if i try to use the pointer var like this:
(A::*callback)();
I become an
expected id-expression before '*' token
Error?
BAD SOLUTION:
https://isocpp.org/wiki/faq/pointers-to-members
Use a typedef instead:
typedef void (A::*aMemberFunctionPointer)();
aMemberFunctionPointer _callback = NULL;
Look for Thomas answer for a better solution.
this
parameter. Give this a read for details: isocpp.org/wiki/faq/pointers-to-membersstd::function
or something similar. Function pointers do not work the way you're trying to make them work. Member-function pointers will do what you want, sort of, and with additional limitations, but there's really no reason to use something so primitive whenstd::function
exists (and if you're using an old toolchain that doesn't support the C++11 standard library there'sboost::function
and various other implementations of the same concept).