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Passing C++ Lambda Functions

I've been searching everywhere for this, and I don't seem to be able to find a straight answer. Some sources say this isn't pos开发者_开发知识库sible, but that only raises more questions for me, which I'll explain further below.

So here's the situation. Suppose I have a custom container class with a selection function like below (this is just an example):

template <typename T>
class Container {
public:
    // ...

    Container<T> select(bool (*condition)(const T&)) const;

    // ...
};

So as you can see, the select function takes a pointer to a condition function. This is a function that defines which items should be selected. So, an example use of this would be something similar to:

bool zero_selector(const int& element) {
    return (element == 0); // Selects all elements that are zero
}

Now if I have a container filled with, say s = { 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0 }, I could select a subset of these that would only contain zeroes using:

t = s.select(&zero_selector); // t = { 0, 0, 0, 0 }

As you can see, this is a bit clunky. Lambda functions would make this much more elegant, so then I could use (I'm not sure if this is the correct syntax for it), for example:

t = s.select([&] (int x) -> bool { return (x == 0); });

My question is, is this possible? If so, what should my function prototype be for Container::select() to accept a lambda as one of its parameters?

If it isn't possible, then how is something like std::for_each implemented that can use a lambda expression as one of its arguments? Any resources that would clearly explain this would be much appreciated. Everything I've found just gives examples of lambda functions and using std::function<> to pass them as parameters, but nothing explains how std::for_each works with lambda functions.

I'd like to note that this code isn't compiled/tested as-is. It's for demonstration purposes only. I have tried implementing the same principles in the actual project and it doesn't work.


There's no need to add the knee-jerk [&]-capture. Your lambda doesn't need it:

[] (int x) -> bool { return (x == 0); }

Captureless lambdas are convertible to the corresponding function pointer, so this should work out of the box.

That said, you should probably declare the select function to accept std::function, to which all lambdas are convertible, capturing or not:

Container<T> select(std::function<bool(const T&)> predicate) const;


You need to declare your lambda as stateless (that is, with an empty capture specification [](int x)-> bool {...}) for it to be convertable to a function pointer.

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