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So basically, I have a global class and a player class. They are both defined in their ObjPlayer.h/ObjPlayer.cpp and same for the global. But how do I forward declare an instance of ObjPlayer within ObjGlobal?

Here is what I have: (Defining the constructor, the class deceleration is elsewhere.)

//Create all the objects
GlobalClass::GlobalClass(void)
{
    //Create a player for testing
    ObjPlayer oPlayer(4, 8);
}

But since it's in the contructor, I don't think I can access the class as is in the main function.

int main()
{
    GlobalClass oGlobal();
    oGlobal.oPlayer.showVars(); //Doesn't work...

    system("PAUSE");
    return 0;
}

(I know I'm not supposed to use system, it's just for debugging.)

I'm quite confused, and I'm not sure how to solve this. (I'm pretty noobish with C++, my main language is GML...)

Any help with this issue is greatly appreciated.

2
  • 3
    What do you mean by "forward declaring" an object within a class? It doesn't make much sense in C++. Mar 7, 2015 at 16:46
  • You need to make oPlayer a member of GlobalClass. Either a public one, or a private with a getter.
    – tux3
    Mar 7, 2015 at 16:47

2 Answers 2

0

You're creating and destroying a local variable within the constructor, not a class member. Once the constructor has finished, it no longer exists, so there's no way to access it from outside.

A class member needs to be declared in the class:

class GlobalClass {
    //...
    ObjPlayer oPlayer;
    //...
};

which can be initialised by the constructor:

GlobalClass::GlobalClass() : oPlayer(4,8) {}

and (if public) accessed as you want:

GlobalClass oGlobal;   // no (), that would declare a function
oGlobal.oPlayer.showVars();
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in the objGlobal head file, before the class declerations add:

class oPlayer;

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