A. How useful/cumbersome is the following trick of using the same function for getter as well as setter, by returning a reference?
B. How good is the practice of adding const to the end of function declarations in case of getters and setters?
#include <iostream>
class A
{
int varReadWrite_;
int varReadOnly_;
int varRestricted_;
public:
A() : varReadOnly_(25) {}
virtual ~A() {}
int& varReadWrite() { return varReadWrite_; }
int varReadOnly() { return varReadOnly_; }
int varRestricted() { return varRestricted_; }
void setVarRestricted(int i); //throwable
};
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
A a;
a.varReadWrite() = 45;
std::cout << a.varReadOnly() << a.varReadWrite() << std::endl;
return 0;
}
The reasons, why I chose this design was:
- ease of access of explicitly read-only or explicitly writable variables.
- the restricted (I dont know what else to call them), the variables, that require sanitization and filtering before being assigned -- these variables might require an explicit setter.
Using boost fusion map is also an interesting possibility as shown here
Update
Const Reference Members are interesting for read-only access to variables, e.g.
class A {
int mA;
public:
int& a;
A(int a_ = 0) : mA(a_), a(mA) {}
};
Practically this comes with the extra effort to code the copy and move constructors, which is an acceptable compromise for me.
Cpp Reference Copy Construtor says
The implicitly-declared or defaulted copy constructor for class T is defined as deleted if... T has non-static data members that cannot be copied (have deleted, inaccessible, or ambiguous copy constructors);