3

I have a class with a method which I would also like to be able to use as a predicate.

class MyClass {
  bool ParticleHasAncestor(const Particle &particle, int id) const;

  class AncestorPredicate {
    int mId;
   public:
    AncestorPredicate(int idCode) : mId(idCode) { }
    bool operator()(const Particle &particle) const { return ParticleHasAncestor(particle, mId); }
  };
};

However, the compiler complains about not being able to use ParticleHasAncestor() without an instance of MyClass. Do I need to use a friend class? Or is there a better solution to this?

I am not using C++11, so cannot use lambda functions.

Update: ParticleHasAncestor() cannot be made static since it uses members of MyClass.

2 Answers 2

5

Make this predicate a static method. But it cannot be const then.

3
  • 1
    "... but it cannot be const then." Not that it needs to. const would be meaningless on a static member function. Aug 29, 2013 at 11:38
  • 1
    If ParticleHasAncestor was static he could also take the next step and consider using std::bind2nd so that he could drop the AncestorPredicate helper altogether. Aug 29, 2013 at 11:44
  • I can't make ParticleHasAncestor() static as it depends on members of MyClass.
    – David Hall
    Aug 29, 2013 at 12:08
0

Unlike Java, in C++ an inner class does not own a pointer to the outer class.

MyClass::AncestorPredicate, does not have an instance of MyClass, and you cannot invoke a non-static method of MyClass without a pointer to an object of that class.

You have two options:

First. Make MyClass::ParticleHasAncestor a static method of MyClass:

class MyClass {
    static bool ParticleHasAncestor(const Particle &particle, int id);

    class AncestorPredicate {
        int mId;
    public:
        AncestorPredicate(int idCode) : mId(idCode) { }
        bool operator()(const Particle &particle) const 
        { 
            return MyClass::ParticleHasAncestor(particle, mId);
        }
    };
};

Second. Create an instance of MyClass and pass a pointer to AncestorPredicate, so that you can invoke ParticleHasAncestor on that object:

class MyClass {
    bool ParticleHasAncestor(const Particle &particle, int id) const;

    class AncestorPredicate {
        int mId;
        const MyClass* obj;
    public:
        AncestorPredicate(int idCode, const MyClass* _obj) : mId(idCode), obj( _obj ) { }
        bool operator()(const Particle &particle) const 
        { 
            return obj -> ParticleHasAncestor(particle, mId);
        }
    };
};
3
  • If I use the second option, can I use the predicate within MyClass thus: electrons.erase(std::remove_if(electrons.begin(), electrons.end(), std::not1(AncestorPredicate(higgs_id, this)())), electrons.end())
    – David Hall
    Aug 29, 2013 at 12:27
  • @DavidHall Yes, you can Aug 29, 2013 at 12:39
  • Note: I should not have the additional brackets in the above. So just AncestorPredicate(higgs_id, this) without trailing ()
    – David Hall
    Aug 29, 2013 at 12:52

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.