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I am trying to use threading in an if statement.

The following code gives an error saying t1 in t1.join is not declared in this scope. Is there a way to make the loop skip the first thread operation and start multithreading for the other passes?

  #include <thread>
  void someFunction() {/*someTask*/}

 void main() {
     bool isFirstRun = true;
     while(true){

     if(isFirstRun==false){std::thread t1(someFunction);}

     //some long task

     if(isFirstRun==false){t1.join}
     if(isFirstRun){isFirstRun = false;}
     }
 }

More generally, is there a way to create a thread like a global variable in C++ and control its execution anywhere in the code? I saw the following in java and thought this might solve my problem if implemented in C++:

Thread t1 = new Thread(new EventThread("e1")); 
//some tasks here
t1.start(); 
//some tasks here
t1.join();
4
  • 1
    The thread destructor is called when the if block ends... since the variable is in that scope only Mar 5, 2016 at 15:32
  • Is there a way around this?
    – ozgeneral
    Mar 5, 2016 at 15:33
  • Declare it in another scope... Mar 5, 2016 at 15:34
  • This has nothing to do with threads. This is no different from if (some condition) { int x = 5; } if (x) /* error, x not defined */ {...}.
    – GManNickG
    Mar 5, 2016 at 18:05

1 Answer 1

2
if(isFirstRun==false){std::thread t1(someFunction);}

The scope of t1 is limited to the block following the first if statement—the curly braces in the statement quoted above. It subsequently goes out of scope and is therefore not accessible later in the function.

If you want it to remain in scope, define it outside of an if block, perhaps at the scope of your main() function.

I saw the following in java and thought this might solve my problem if implemented in C++:

Thread t1 = new Thread(new EventThread("e1")); 

Certainly you can new up an object (new returns a pointer), but C++ isn't Java. You should not follow the same programming patterns. If creating the object on the stack is sufficient, then do that.

void main()

Also, there is no such function as void main() in C++; the entry point returns int.


A simple example of implementing threading in C++ is available here.

5
  • do you mean I should do if(firstRun){/*without threading*/}else{/*same code with threading*/}
    – ozgeneral
    Mar 5, 2016 at 15:37
  • You know how you defined the isFirstRun variable at the beginning of the main() function? You can do the exact same thing with t1. Mar 5, 2016 at 15:38
  • Yeah but it starts running immediately then. I want it to start running in while loop, after the first run.
    – ozgeneral
    Mar 5, 2016 at 15:39
  • Well, you can declare the variable at an outer scope (std::thread t1;) so that it will be default-constructed, which doesn't start a thread. Then, when you want to start the thread, you can create a new thread and assign it to t1: t1 = std::thread(...); Mar 5, 2016 at 15:43
  • That was what I was looking for, thanks.
    – ozgeneral
    Mar 5, 2016 at 15:44

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