0

Base class

class Io_obj
{
public:
    virtual Io_obj* clone() const =0;
    virtual ~Io_obj(){}
};

Derived classes

class Io_circle : public Io_obj
{
    string c;
public:
    Io_circle(string& s):c{s}{cout << c << '\n';}
    Io_circle* clone() const override{return new Io_circle{*this};}
    static Io_obj* new_circle(string& s){return new Io_circle{s};}
};

class Io_triangle : public Io_obj
{
    string t;
public:
    Io_triangle(string& s):t{s}{cout << t << '\n';}
    Io_triangle* clone() const override{return new Io_triangle{*this};}
    static Io_obj* new_triangle(string& s){return new Io_triangle{s};}
};

main functions

using Pf = Io_obj*(string&);
map<string,Pf> io_map{{"circle",&Io_circle::new_circle},{"triangle",&Io_triangle::new_triangle}};
vector<string> vs{"circle","triangle"};

Io_obj* get_obj(int i){
    string word = vs[i];

    if(auto f=io_map[word]){
        return f(word);
    }else{
        throw runtime_error{"shape not found"};
    }
}

I get an error couldn't deduce template parameter '_InputIterator' map<string,Pf> io_map{{"circle",&Io_circle::new_circle},{"triangle",&Io_triangle::new_triangle}};

Code from the C++ programming language -- Bjarne Stroustrup Ch22.2.4

I also tried the technique presented in the book

io_map["circle"] = &Io_circle::new_circle;
io_map["triangle"] = &Io_triangle::new_triangle;

It doesn't work either [map] does not name a type

1
  • have you added "#include <map>" line? Nov 6, 2015 at 10:41

1 Answer 1

1

the problem is your function pointer declaration is invalid. Good one must look like following:

using Pf = Io_obj*(*)(string&);

I've checked your code with this correction and it's compiled OK. code is here

UPD: Also, I can recommend you to use the std::function instead of raw function pointers as more type-safe alternative

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.