0

Can anyone please explain why the overloaded operator -> for class Foo is not being called from a pointer of type Foo *?

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

class Foo {
public:
Foo * operator -> () {
    cout << "calling Foo * operator -> ()\n";
    return this;
}
    int x;
};


void main() {
    Foo f;
    Foo * pF = &f;
    pF->x;                  // Why is overloaded operator-> not being called here?
    (pF->operator->())->x;  // This works.

    cout << "End test.\n";
}
1
  • The second statement works because you are essentially calling the operator -> method using your pointer pF. There is no overloading going on there. As answered below you can only overload operators for instances not pointers. Jul 29, 2016 at 18:40

3 Answers 3

6

Why is overloaded operator-> not being called here?

Because pF is a pointer, not a Foo instance. You have overloaded operator-> for Foo, not Foo*. You may call your overloaded operator-> directly on f.

f->x;

You may not overload operator-> for Foo* or any other pointer type.

1
  • Well, there goes my hope for a implicit pointer virtual address system. Give client a Foo *, be able to move Foo object in memory (optimization), have Foo * still point to correct object. Looks like I'll have use a smart pointer container class. Jul 29, 2016 at 18:40
3

You overloaded it for Foo, not for Foo* (which is impossible).

This would have worked:

(f.operator->())->x;

Or, of course:

f->x;

Being able to use that short syntax is the entire purpose of the overload, no? Although it's quite confusing to just return a pointer to the same object you invoked the operator on.

3
  • Why so roundabout way of calling? Why not just f->x? Jul 29, 2016 at 17:33
  • @Revolver_Ocelot: Yeah or that. I wanted to keep the OP's intent but fix their direct bug. Jul 29, 2016 at 17:36
  • @HiI'mFrogatto: No. The entire point of operator-> is to make f->x work lol Jul 29, 2016 at 17:43
2

You have overloaded "point-to" operator of the type Foo, not type Foo*.

class Foo {
public:
    // Overload 'point-to' operator of 'Foo'
    Foo * operator -> () {
        cout << "calling Foo * operator -> ()\n";
        return this;
    }
    int x;
};

Example of usage:

Foo f;
f.operator->();

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