1

In a project of mine, I'm writing a wrapper for std::vector. I'm doing this because I am using homogeneous coordinates and for some operations it's just easier to temporarily 'forget' the fourth coordinate.

Now I stumbled upon a problem. I have loads of assignments like the following:

    Vector v;
    v(0) = 5;
    v(1) = 6;

and so on. I also want to do the following:

   double x;
   x = v(0);

For that last thing, I can overload the () operator, but how would implement the first thing? (the zero and one being an index).

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  • It sounds like there's little reason to use std::vector at all in your case. Despite its name, it has nothing to do with the vectors used in geometry or computer graphics.
    – jalf
    Aug 2, 2011 at 21:32

4 Answers 4

5

Just return reference.

class Vector
{
  int data[4];
  int & operator() (int index) { return data[index]; }
};
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  • 1
    Don't forget a const overload. Aug 2, 2011 at 21:25
  • Thanks a lot, I discovered it myself a minute ago. Seems I tried everything but missed this. Ah well, thanks a lot!
    – Kevin
    Aug 2, 2011 at 21:45
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Return a non-const reference to the element to be modified.

1

Two things-

  1. You should probably be overloading operator[] to do this rather than operator(), since it's the more natural operator here. operator() is used to create function objects, while operator[] is the operator meaning "pick out the element at this position."

  2. You can support assignment to the result of operator[] / operator() by having the function return a reference to the value that should be written to. As a simple example, here's some code that represents a class wrapping a raw array:

(code here:)

class Array {
public:
    int& operator[] (unsigned index);
    int  operator[] (unsigned index) const;

private:
    int array[137];
};

int& Array::operator[] (unsigned index) {
    return array[index];
}
int Array::operator[] (unsigned index) const {
    return array[index];
}

The second of these functions is a const overload so you can have const Array read but not write values.

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  • Yeah, when I was writing this code I was thinking about the c++faqslite explanation why you should use () instead of [] for a matrix.
    – Kevin
    Aug 2, 2011 at 21:48
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In the standard libraries, such things are implemented by having operator() (well, actually usually operator[]) return type double &. By returning a reference to a double, you can assign to or from it.

However, are you sure you want to wrap this around std::vector? This class is not a vector in the mathematical sense; it's much like a Java ArrayList, and so not at all efficient for small structures. Usually when I'm writing my own vector classes I'm planning on having lots of them around, so I implement a class from scratch on top of a static array.

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