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I have a class manipulating only shared_ptr to an inheritance hierarchy (quite simple, there are a few classes, say A, B, C etc. inheriting from a single class Base). Since I do not need to manipulate the instances of A, B, C... themselves, they are only forward declared. However, the compiler chokes when I try to pass a shared_ptr<A> to a method taking a shared_ptr<Base>, since the compiler does not know that A inherits from Base. Is there any other way than either static_pointer_castor #includethe header of class A? And if not, which one would you choose?

EDIT: adding some code

// in some file: (Base.h)
class Base
{
    /*code*/
}

// in another file (A.h)
class A : public Base
{
}

// in my file (impl.cpp)
class A; // forward declaration    

void Dummy()
{
    std::shared_ptr<A> myPtr;

    // we have somewhere: void sillyFunction(shared_ptr<Base> foo)
    sillyFunction(myPtr); // does not compile, as no conversion is found.
}
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  • 1
    An code example would demonstrate your problem better than in words.
    – Alok Save
    Sep 14, 2011 at 18:03
  • Separate the implementation from the declarations and provide the implementation with the full declarations of the derived classes. This should work. Post more details if you're still having problems.
    – Kerrek SB
    Sep 14, 2011 at 18:05
  • The declaration is separate from the implementation. The thing is, I seem to have only a name dependency and I don't really want to have a full dependency on the classes A, B, C...
    – wendazhou
    Sep 14, 2011 at 18:28

1 Answer 1

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Is there any other way than either static_pointer_castor #includethe header of class A?

No. In fact, the #include is the only way to do it properly (static_pointer_cast either wouldn't work or invokes undefined behavior). You can't cast ordinary pointers between incomplete subclass and superclass, either.

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