Are (seemingly) shady things ever acceptable for practical reasons?
First, a bit of background on my code. I'm writing the graphics module of my 2D game. My module contains more than two classes, but I'll only mention two in here: Font and GraphicsRenderer.
Font provides an interface through which to load (and release) files and nothing much more. In my Font header I don't want any implementation details to leak, and that includes the data types of the third-party library I'm using. The way I prevent the third-party lib from being visible in the header is through an incomplete type (I understand this is standard practice):
class Font
{
private:
struct FontData;
boost::shared_ptr<FontData> data_;
};
GraphicsRenderer is the (read: singleton) device that initializes and finalizes the third-party graphics library and also is used to render graphical objects (such as Fonts, Images, etc). The reason it's a singleton is because, as I've said, the class initializes the third-party library automatically; it does this when the singleton object is created and exits the library when the singleton is destroyed.
Anyway, in order for GR to be able to render Font it must obviously have access to its FontData object. One option would be to have a public getter, but that would expose the implementation of Font (no other class other than Font and GR should care about FontData). Instead I considered it's better to make GR a friend of Font.
Note: Until now I've done two things that some may consider shady (singleton and friend), but these are not the things I want to ask you about. Nevertheless, if you think my rationale for making GR a singleton and a friend of Font is wrong please do criticize me and maybe offer better solutions.
The shady thing. So GR has access to Font::data_ though friendship, but how does it know exactly what a FontData is (since it's not defined in the header, it's an incomplete type)? I'll just show the code and the comment that includes the rationale...
// =============================================================================
// graphics/font.cpp
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
struct Font::FontData
: public sf::Font
{
// Just a synonym of sf::Font
};
// A redefinition of FontData exists in GraphicsRenderer::printText(),
// which will have to be modified as well if this definition is modified.
// (The redefinition is called FontDataSurogate.)
// Why not have FontData defined only once in a separate header:
// If the definition of FontData changes, most likely printText() text will
// have to be altered also regardless. Considering that and also that FontData
// has (and should have) a very simple definition, a separate header was
// considered too much of an overhead and of little practical advantage.
// =============================================================================
// graphics/graphics_renderer.cpp
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
void GraphicsRenderer::printText(const Font& fnt /* ... */)
{
struct FontDataSurogate
: public sf::Font {
};
FontDataSurogate* suro = (FontDataSurogate*)fnt.data_.get();
sf::Font& font = (sf::Font)(*suro);
// ...
}
So that's the shady thing I'm trying to do. Basically what I want is a review of my rationale, so please tell me if you think I've done something horrendous or if not confirm my rationale so I can be a bit surer I'm doing the right thing. :) (This is my biggest project yet and I'm only at the beginning so I'm kinda feeling things in the dark atm.)
FontData.. – smerlin Apr 8 '11 at 23:48.hfile that defines a data-structure shared between different parts of the code. – aroth Apr 8 '11 at 23:49Font::FontDatalooks good to me. – Lightness Races in Orbit Apr 9 '11 at 0:02(sf::Font&)(*suro)instead of(sf::Font)(*suro); otherwise, I agree with the others: just have a header. :) It'll be encapsulated enough. – Lightness Races in Orbit Apr 9 '11 at 0:03