Replace your callback function with a functor - they can store state. An example functor:
#include <iostream>
#include <memory>
class Functor
{
private:
std::shared_ptr<int> m_count;
public:
Functor()
: m_count(new int(0))
{}
void operator()()
{
++(*m_count);
// do other stuff...
}
int count() const
{
return *m_count;
}
};
template <typename F>
void f(F callback)
{
// do stuff
callback();
// do other stuff
}
int main()
{
Functor callback;
f(callback);
f(callback);
std::cout << callback.count(); // prints 2
return 0;
}
Note the use of a shared_ptr
inside the functor - this is because f
has a local copy of the functor (note the pass-by-value) and you want that copy to share its int
with the functor to which you have access. Note also that f
has to take its argument by value, since you want to support all callables, and not just functors.