I've seen a few questions that refer to the std::bad_function_call
exception, but haven't been able to find out any by Googling about what causes this exception.
What kind of behavior is supposed to cause this exception? Can you give me minimal examples that don't have other semantic problems also going on?
Sure- the easiest is where you try to call a std::function
that's empty.
int main() {
std::function<int()> intfunc;
int x = intfunc(); // BAD
}
"Performing a function call without having a target to call throws an exception of type
std::bad_function_call"
std::function<void(int,int)> f;
f(33,66); // throws std::bad_function_call
No credits to me....its Nicolai Josuttis Pundit of C++ Standard Lib
in my case was the problem was in capture list. i have a recursive lambda function.
//decl
std::function<void(const SBone*, const core::vector3df&, const core::quaternion&)> f_build;
f_build = [&f_build](const SBone* bone, const core::vector3df& pos, const core::quaternion& rot)
{
...
}
missing & from f_build in capture list generate a bad call.
Call of a temporary function also can throw:
struct F
{
const std::function<void()>& myF;
F(const std::function<void()>& f) : myF(f) {}
void call()
{
myF();
}
};
int main()
{
F f([]{ std::cout << "Hello World!" << std::endl;});
f.call();
return 0;
}
But this depend on compiler (vc++ throws, g++ not).