vote up 4 vote down star
1

I have the following class in C++:

class a {
    const int b[2];
    // other stuff follows

    // and here's the constructor
    a(void);
}

The question is, how do I initialize b in the initialization list, given that I can't initialize it inside the body of the function of the constructor, because b is const?

This doesn't work:

a::a(void) : 
    b([2,3])
{
     // other initialization stuff
}

Edit: The case in point is when I can have different values for b for different instances, but the values are known to be constant for the lifetime of the instance.

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1  
The "curly-braces section" is called a "body" of a function. – Kasprzol Oct 2 '08 at 13:18
Thanks. I corrected that in the question. – Nathan Fellman Feb 3 at 7:14

6 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

Like the others said, ISO C++ doesn't support that. But you can workaround it. Just use std::vector instead.

int* a = new int[N];
// fill a

class C {
  const std::vector<int> v;
public:
  C():v(a, a+N) {}
};
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vote up 0 vote down

interestingly, in C# you have the keyword const that translates to C++'s static const, as opposed to readonly which can be only set at constructors and initializations, even by non-constants, ex:

readonly DateTime a = DateTime.Now;

I agree, if you have a const pre-defined array you might as well make it static. At that point you can use this interesting syntax:

//in header file
class a{
    static const int SIZE;
    static const char array[][10];
};
//in cpp file:
const int a::SIZE = 5;
const char array[SIZE][10] = {"hello", "cruel","world","goodbye", "!"};

however, I did not find a way around the constant '10'. The reason is clear though, it needs it to know how to perform accessing to the array. A possible alternative is to use #define, but I dislike that method and I #undef at the end of the header, with a comment to edit there at CPP as well in case if a change.

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vote up 0 vote down

ISO standard C++ doesn't let you do this. If it did, the syntax would probably be:

a::a(void) :
b({2,3})
{
    // other initialization stuff
}

Or something along those lines. From your question it actually sounds like what you want is a constant class (aka static) member that is the array. C++ does let you do this. Like so:

#include <iostream>

class A 
{
public:
    A();
    static const int a[2];
};

const int A::a[2] = {0, 1};

A::A()
{
}

int main (int argc, char * const argv[]) 
{
    std::cout << "A::a => " << A::a[0] << ", " << A::a[1] << "\n";
    return 0;
}

The output being:

A::a => 0, 1

Now of course since this is a static class member it is the same for every instance of class A. If that is not what you want, ie you want each instance of A to have different element values in the array a then you're making the mistake of trying to make the array const to begin with. You should just be doing this:

#include <iostream>

class A 
{
public:
    A();
    int a[2];
};

A::A()
{
    a[0] = 9; // or some calculation
    a[1] = 10; // or some calculation
}

int main (int argc, char * const argv[]) 
{
    A v;
    std::cout << "v.a => " << v.a[0] << ", " << v.a[1] << "\n";
    return 0;
}
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why is it a mistake to make the array const to begin with? What if I want the values to remain the same for the life of the instance, like some sort of id? – Nathan Fellman Oct 2 '08 at 12:15
Then you should be using an enum type. – orj Oct 17 '08 at 11:06
how would I use an enum type here? – Nathan Fellman Dec 20 '08 at 19:03
vote up 2 vote down

Where I've a constant array, it's always been done as static. If you can accept that, this code should compile and run.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

class a {
        static const int b[2];
public:
        a(void) {
                for(int i = 0; i < 2; i++) {
                        printf("b[%d] = [%d]\n", i, b[i]);
                }
        }
};

const int a::b[2] = { 4, 2 };

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
        a foo;
        return 0;
}
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that assumes that I do indeed want a static member, but that isn't always the case. I could in fact have a const array that has different values for different instances of the class, but the values never change during the lifetime of the class – Nathan Fellman Oct 2 '08 at 11:48
vote up 12 vote down

It is not possible in the current standard. I believe you'll be able to do this in C++0x using initializer lists (see A Brief Look at C++0x, by Bjarne Stroustrup, for more information about initializer lists and other nice C++0x features).

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vote up 0 vote down

You can't do that from the initialization list,

Have a look at this:

http://www.cprogramming.com/tutorial/initialization-lists-c++.html

:)

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