9

Observe the following program in which a function accepts both the expected type and any type that is a typedef of that type.

//a user defined type
class Widget{};

//a function that takes a Widget
void function (Widget w){}

int main(){

    //make a typedef (this is C++11 syntax for a typedef. It's the same thing)
    using Gadget = Widget;

    //make the two "different types" (well.. they're not really different as you will see)
    Widget w;
    Gadget g;

    //call a function that should ONLY accept Widgets
    function(w); //works (good)
    function(g); //<- works (I do not want this to compile though)

}

As you can see, a typedef does not actually distinguish a new type. I thought instead to inherit from the type:

//inherit instead
class Gadget: public Widget{};

//make the two "different types"
Widget w;
Gadget g;

//call the function that should ONLY accept widgets
function(w); //works (good)
function(g); //<- works (I do not want this to compile though)

Same problem.
Looking at boost, I thought to try a strong typedef:

#include <boost/serialization/strong_typedef.hpp>

//a user defined type
class Widget{};

//a function that takes the user defined type
void function (Widget w){}

int main(){

    //try to strongly typedef
    BOOST_STRONG_TYPEDEF(Widget, Gadget)

    //make the two "different types"
    Widget w;
    Gadget g;

    //call the function that should ONLY accept widgets
    function(w);
    function(g);

}

compile errors:

In member function ‘bool main()::Gadget::operator==(const main()::Gadget&) const’:
error: no match for ‘operator==’ (operand types are ‘const Widget’ and ‘const Widget’)
  BOOST_STRONG_TYPEDEF(Widget, Gadget)
  ^
In member function ‘bool main()::Gadget::operator<(const main()::Gadget&) const’:
error: no match for ‘operator<’ (operand types are ‘const Widget’ and ‘const Widget’)
  BOOST_STRONG_TYPEDEF(Widget, Gadget)
  ^

Apparently BOOST_STRONG_TYPEDEF only works on primitive types.
I tried to do inheritance again, but stop the implicit conversion:

//I want the functionality, but these are NOT the same type!
class Gadget: public Widget{
    operator Widget() = delete;
};

That did not work either.

Questions:

  1. Why does boost strong_typedef only work on primitive types?
  2. How can I 'typedef' a non-primitive type to get functionality similar to boost strong_typef?
10
  • 1
    I guess I will class WidgetBase, and do class Widget: public WidgetBase; class Gadget: public WidgetBase.
    – xis
    Apr 21, 2014 at 22:39
  • @zneak: That's what BOOST_STRONG_TYPEDEF does. Apr 21, 2014 at 22:47
  • @Deduplicator Looking at the implementation strong_typedef uses a member and not inheritance.
    – pmr
    Apr 21, 2014 at 22:47
  • It's not that strong_typedef only works for primitive types, but it requires the argument type to be totally ordered (operator==, operator<) you maybe can provide them or just use the code from strong_typedef minus the ordering.
    – pmr
    Apr 21, 2014 at 22:49
  • 1
    You want a type Gadget which is like Widget but not like Widget. Would it help to take a step back and think about what you are actually trying to declare?
    – Oktalist
    Apr 21, 2014 at 22:52

3 Answers 3

6

Basically you need two unrelated classes with the same behavior. I would use a parametrized template for that:

template<int tag> class WidgetGadget { ... };
typedef WidgetGadget<0> Widget;
typedef WidgetGadget<1> Gadget;
3

BOOST_STRONG_TYPEDEF actually assumes that types are equatable (==), assignable (=) and less-than-comparable (<).

If your type isn't, then the macro results in code that doesn't compile, as you have witnessed. You can roll your own macro or provide implementations for the required operations.

You can find a CUSTOM_STRONG_TYPEDEF in this answer from februari 2012: How to use comparison operators on variant with contained types?, which explicitly avoids getting the default comparison behaviour

Update Made the example more explicit for your use case, see it Live On Coliru

//a user defined type
class Widget{};
class Frobnicator{};

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// copied and reduced from boost/strong_typedef.hpp
#define CUSTOM_STRONG_TYPEDEF(T, D)                                 \
struct D                                                            \
    /*: boost::totally_ordered1< D           */                     \
    /*, boost::totally_ordered2< D, T        */                     \
    /*> >                                    */                     \
{                                                                   \
    T t;                                                            \
    explicit D(const T t_) : t(t_) {};                              \
    D(){};                                                          \
    D(const D & t_) : t(t_.t){}                                     \
    D & operator=(const D & rhs) { t = rhs.t; return *this;}        \
    D & operator=(const T & rhs) { t = rhs; return *this;}          \
    explicit operator const T & () const {return t; }               \
    explicit operator T & () { return t; }                          \
    /*bool operator==(const D & rhs) const { return t == rhs.t; } */\
    /*bool operator<(const D & rhs) const { return t < rhs.t; }   */\
};

CUSTOM_STRONG_TYPEDEF(Widget, Gadget)
CUSTOM_STRONG_TYPEDEF(Frobnicator, Normalcy)

void acceptWidget(Widget){}
void acceptGadget(Gadget){}
void acceptFrobnicator(Frobnicator){}
void acceptNormalcy(Normalcy){}

int main(){

    //make the two "different types" (well.. they're not really different as you will see)
    Widget w;
    Gadget g;

    //call a function that should ONLY accept Widgets
    acceptWidget(w); //works (good)
    acceptGadget(g);

    //acceptWidget(g); // Error
    //acceptGadget(w); // Error
    // but we can enjoy conversions if we summon them
    acceptWidget(static_cast<Widget&>(g));

    Frobnicator f;
    Normalcy n;
    acceptFrobnicator(f);
    acceptNormalcy(n);

}
4
  • To work for the problem given in the original question, one would need to comment out the last two methods for operator T. This is an ok solution, but it would have to be re-written again and again to handle different types, and thus the macros would have to be uniquely named. Apr 23, 2014 at 21:34
  • I don't see what you mean. I mainly just quoted the other answer. But, making the conversions explicit will do, and, no you don't have to write this over and over? Updated my answer. See it Live On Coliru**
    – sehe
    Apr 23, 2014 at 21:58
  • Ah! I see about the explicit now. I added onto your example program to illustrate how this macro can only be used for one kind of class functionality. Thus I would have to write multiple macros to handle these different cases. coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/8d80373ebd596c61 Apr 23, 2014 at 22:39
  • @TrevorHickey Oh. Well. I get that now, but that was never any part of your question :S. LESSON: having the requirements is essential for getting the right solution. Also, note that I do answer the first part (1.) of your question too, unlike any of the other answers. I think you will want to use grep's answer, but it's not what you asked about :/
    – sehe
    Apr 24, 2014 at 6:38
1

Maybe you could use private inheritance and some usings?

class Gadget : Widget { using Widget::Widget; using Widget::foo; ... };
1
  • I think this is an ok solution assuming there are not too many methods or data members to list out. Apr 21, 2014 at 23:20

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