vote up 0 vote down star

Hi,

In my new project i am building a data management module.I want to give a simple template storage type to upper layers like

template<typename T>
class Data
{
 public:
  T getValue();
 private:

 boost::numeric::ublas::matrix<T> data;
}

My aim is, to change allocator of data with some different allocators like Boost.inter process allocator or Boost.pool allocator (Boost Ublas Matrix and vector classes takes allocator as a template parameter ).And give only a single class and Factory method to create appropriate allocator under cover.A virtual base class could be sweet but i couldn't handle how to use it with templates.What kind of design patterns or solutions do you offer?

Edit:

I will use boost.pool and boost.shared_memory_allocator.Briefly i want to have different classes with different allocation strategies.But my point is upper parts of program should have no knowledge about it.Real challenge for me is to collect different template classes with an identical base classes.

Edit: For one who want to use matrix class with custom allocator.

it is like this:

 using boost::numeric::ublas;

    template<typename T, class Allocator = boost::pool_allocator<T>>
    class
    {      
      public:
      matrix<T, row_major, std::vector<T,Allocator>> mData;
    }
flag

67% accept rate

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

It's not clear what you want, but as a shot in the dark, is the following helpful?

template<typename T>
class IData
{
 public:
  virtual T getValue() = 0;
  virtual ~IData() {}
};

template<typename T, typename Allocator=std::allocator<T> >
class Data : public IData<T>
{
 public:
  virtual T getValue();
 private:

 boost::numeric::ublas::matrix<T, Allocator> data;
}
link|flag
sorry, i accept, it wasnt clear but your method is feasible for me. – Qubeuc Apr 7 at 19:43
Cool :) glad to help – Iraimbilanja Apr 7 at 19:44
I put you back up :P – GMan Apr 7 at 19:45
vote up 0 vote down

Are you trying to swap allocators at compile time based on type? You'd need a if-else template and some allocator class (template) definitions.

If you want runtime allocators, then it's easier: you'd put the base class (interface definition class) in the template and pass appropriate subclasses based on whatever condition you need to fulfill.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.