How to directly bind a member function to an std::

2019-01-14 23:01发布

问题:

I can easily bind member functions to a std::function by wrapping them with a lambda expression with capture clause.

class Class
{
    Class()
    {
        Register([=](int n){ Function(n); });
    }

    void Register(std::function<void(int)> Callback)
    {

    }

    void Function(int Number)
    {

    }
};

But I want to bind them directly, something like the following.

// ...
Register(&Class::Function);
// ...

I think according to the C++11 standard, this should be supported. However, in Visual Studio 11 I get these compiler errors.

error C2440: 'newline' : cannot convert from 'int' to 'Class *'

error C2647: '.*' : cannot dereference a 'void (__thiscall Class::* )(int)' on a 'int'

回答1:

I think according to the C++11 standard, this should be supported

Not really, because a non-static member function has an implicit first parameter of type (cv-qualified) YourType*, so in this case it does not match void(int). Hence the need for std::bind:

Register(std::bind(&Class::Function, PointerToSomeInstanceOfClass, _1));

For example

Class c;
using namespace std::placeholders; // for _1, _2 etc.
c.Register(std::bind(&Class::Function, &c, _1));

Edit You mention that this is to be called with the same Class instance. In that case, you can use a simple non-member function:

void (int n) foo
{
  theClassInstance.Function(n);
}

then

Class c;
c.Register(foo);


回答2:

According to Stephan T. Lavavej - "Avoid using bind(), ..., use lambdas". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zt7ThwVfap0&t=32m20s

In this case:

Class()
{
    Register([this](int n){ Function(n); });
}


回答3:

You can use std::bind:

using namespace std::placeholders;  // For _1 in the bind call

// ...

Register(std::bind(&Class::Function, this, _1));


回答4:

With std::function and std::bind, you can treat different class member function the same.

#include <iostream>
#include <functional>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
using namespace std::placeholders;

class Foo
{
public:
    void foo(const string &msg)
    {
        cout << msg << '\n';
    }
};

class Bar
{
public:
    void bar(const string &msg, const string &suffix)
    {
        cout << msg << suffix << '\n';
    }
};

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
    Foo foo;
    Bar bar;

    vector<function<void (const string &msg)>> collection;
    collection.push_back(bind(&Foo::foo, &foo, _1));
    collection.push_back(bind(&Bar::bar, &bar, _1, "bar"));

    for (auto f : collection) {
        f("foo");
    }

    return 0;
}