Consider the following code:
class Base
{
public:
virtual void* allocate(){ return nullptr; }
};
template <class T> class BaseTemplate : public Base
{
public:
void* allocate() override { return new T(); }
};
class IntSpecialization : public BaseTemplate<int>
{
};
Base GetSpecialization(const int&){ return IntSpecialization(); }
The goal is to be able to use template to implement specializations, but still allow users to work using the base class interface, such as:
int a;
auto s = GetSpecialization(a);
auto p = s.allocate();
The above code does not work; s.allocate()
always return nullptr
for obvious reasons.
I absolutely need the GetSpecialization
function to return the Base
non-template class, so how do I go about this?
The Base
class virtual method cannot be pure, because otherwise it becomes abstract and it will fail the compilation at GetSpecialization
.
What is the best approach to solve this pattern? Using C++11? Thanks!