I'm using a library which returns a reference to me.
I need to use this reference as class-attribute.
Not being able to initialize the attribute in constructor directly (the lib needs to be inited before), I thought about using a shared_ptr for lazy initialization:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <tr1/memory>
//This is library, cannot touch
std::string globalString = "TEST";
std::string& getStringReference()
{
return globalString;
}
//this is my class which uses the library
class Foo
{
public:
Foo() :
testString_( std::tr1::shared_ptr< std::string& >() )
{
//do some initialization of the library here...
//now init the shared_ptr
testString_.reset( getStringReference() );
}
std::string getString() const
{
return *testString_;
}
private:
std::tr1::shared_ptr< std::string& > testString_;
};
//and a main to be compilable and check if the above works...
int main()
{
Foo foo;
std::cout << foo.getString() << std::endl;
}
But unfortunately this does not work. g++ gives messages like this:
error: forming pointer to reference type ‘std::string&’
I tried some other ways to get the reference into the shared_ptr, but nothing works... Perhaps you could give me a hint.
Note:
- In "real-world" instead of std::string the datatype is a class without default constructor.
- For those who still wonder: The above is just a simplified example-code :)
UPDATE:
- While trying to apply the suggestions, I found out that contrary to the used std::string from example, my class has a private copy constructor. This means I'm not able to just copy the object into a new one.
