5

I often have classes which provide simple member-by-member comparison:

class ApplicationSettings
{
public:
   bool operator==(const ApplicationSettings& other) const;
   bool operator!=(const ApplicationSettings& other) const;

private:
   SkinType m_ApplicationSkin;
   UpdateCheckInterval m_IntervalForUpdateChecks;
   bool m_bDockSelectionWidget;
   // Add future members to operator==
};

bool ApplicationSettings::operator==(const ApplicationSettings& other) const
{
   if (m_ApplicationSkin != other.m_ApplicationSkin)
   {
      return false;
   }

   if (m_IntervalForUpdateChecks != other.m_IntervalForUpdateChecks)
   {
      return false;
   }

   if (m_bDockSelectionWidget != other.m_bDockSelectionWidget)
   {
      return false;
   }

   return true;
}

bool ApplicationSettings::operator!=(const ApplicationSettings& other) const;
{
   return ( ! operator==(other));
}

Given that C++ at this time does not provide any construct to generate an operator==, is there a better way to ensure future members become part of the comparison, other than the comment I added below the data members?

6

2 Answers 2

8

It doesn't catch every case, and annoyingly it's compiler and platform dependent, but one way is to static_assert based on the sizeof of the type:

static_assert<sizeof(*this) == <n>, "More members added?");

where <n> is a constexpr.

If new members are introduced then, more often than not, sizeof changes, and you'll induce a compile time failure.

6
  • Brilliant, but how to compute n?
    – p-a-o-l-o
    Mar 6, 2018 at 9:52
  • @p-a-o-l-o: A printf call to get the value, then edit the source code. Yes, it's not great.
    – Bathsheba
    Mar 6, 2018 at 9:53
  • Can be useful anyway.
    – p-a-o-l-o
    Mar 6, 2018 at 9:54
  • Alternatively, locally declare a dummy class with the same members and use it in the right side of the comparison. This will be more portable.
    – user1196549
    Mar 6, 2018 at 9:56
  • Would it be possible to compute the expected sizeof based on the last member compared in operator== (given that this is also the last member in the memory layout of the class)? It would only make a runtime check possible, but it at least the check would be right where the offending code is. Mar 6, 2018 at 12:13
4

Focusing solely on the technical aspect of this, you can leverage the fact the standard library std::tuple type overloads operator== for member-wise comparison. If you don't mind sacrificing simple member access elsewhere, you can just wrap your members in a tuple. Something like this:

#include <tuple>

class ApplicationSettings
{
public:
   bool operator==(const ApplicationSettings& other) const;
   bool operator!=(const ApplicationSettings& other) const;

private:

   enum m {
     ApplicationSkin, 
     IntervalForUpdateChecks,
     bDockSelectionWidget
   };

   std::tuple<
     SkinType,
     UpdateCheckInterval,
     bool
   > m_Data;
};

Now implementing the comparison operator is a no-brainer:

bool ApplicationSettings::operator==(const ApplicationSettings& other) const {
  m_Data == other.m_Data;
}

Of course, the sacrifice is that other member functions need to access other members via std::get<m::ApplicationSkin>(m_Data). Which could raise a fair few eyebrows.

7
  • This should even allow me to handle some corner cases: If I use std::equal_to, I can provide a custom comparison template method that handles special members like floats. Also, I can order the tuple in the most performance-efficient way (simple-to-compare members first) Mar 6, 2018 at 10:10
  • @Asperamanca - I didn't consider that. You are right of course. It may even make the split of the member type from its identifier-turned-integral-constant more tolerable. Still, don't jump the gun with this. Consider the trade-offs carefully. Mar 6, 2018 at 10:14
  • I think enum class isn't a good choice (template argument deduction/substitution fails).
    – p-a-o-l-o
    Mar 6, 2018 at 10:26
  • 1
    I'm not a fan of this answer - and I'm not even sure it actually solves the issue. It adds complexity and confusion to an uninformed reader - "wtf are all those things added as a tuple?" and it just makes things plain ugly. If I came across this class and needed to add a member would I add it to the tuple or just add it as another member? Sure now I've read this answer I'd add it to the tuple but I'm not convinced a non informed programmer necessarily would.
    – Mike Vine
    Mar 6, 2018 at 10:26
  • @MikeVine - I wrote it and I'd be hesitant to recommend it myself. Like I started with, I focused solely on the technical. This is just about showing feasibility. The OP wants the operators to not need updating if a data member is added. So there it is. You can downvote if you think this isn't useful, no hard feelings. Mar 6, 2018 at 10:28

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