What is correct way to initialize a static member of type 'T &' in a templated class?
I'm playing around with an eager-initializing generic singleton class. The idea is that you inherit publicly from the class like so:
class foo : public singleton<foo> { };
I've learned a lot in the process but I'm stuck right now because it's breaking my Visual Studio 2008 linker. The problem is with the static instance member and/or its initialization.
template<class T>
class singleton {
singleton();
singleton(singleton const &);
singleton & operator = (singleton const &);
public:
static T & instance;
};
template<class T> T & T::instance;
Any insight would be greatly appreciated!
EDIT:
With this class declaration...
template<class T>
class singleton {
singleton();
singleton(singleton const &);
singleton & operator = (singleton const &);
public:
static T instance;
};
template <class T> T singleton<T>::instance;
When I try to do this...
class foo : public singleton<foo> { };
I get this error...
error C2248: 'singleton::singleton' : cannot access private member declared in class 'singleton'
...
This diagnostic occurred in the compiler generated function 'foo::foo(void)'
My interpretation is that singleton wants to construct a foo object which, by inheritance, depends on the construction of a singleton whose constructor is private. I figured singleton would have access to its own constructor but I guess not. Any ideas?
EDIT 2:
I've realized that the approach of inheriting from singleton<T>
has the problem of requiring change to the class to be used as a singleton. I've ended up with the following code for my eager-initializing singleton class template.
template<typename T>
class singleton_wrapper {
singleton_wrapper();
开发者_Python百科singleton_wrapper(singleton_wrapper const &);
singleton_wrapper & operator = (singleton_wrapper const &);
static T instance;
template<typename T> friend T & singleton();
};
template<typename T> T singleton_wrapper<T>::instance;
template<typename T>
T & singleton() {
return singleton_wrapper<T>::instance;
}
For class...
class foo {
public:
void bar() { }
};
...One would access a single instance of it (initialized before main()) using the following:
singleton<foo>().bar();
Thanks again for the help, especially GMan. I'm very pleased with my first experience on stackoverflow.
You can't, since you don't have a concrete instance. You can need to create an actual instance that you can refer to:
template <class T>
class singleton {
...
private:
static T instance_;
public:
static T& instance;
};
template <class T> T singleton<T>::instance_;
template <class T> T& singleton<T>::instance = singleton<T>::instance;
Or, more simply, just ditch the reference altogether:
template <class T>
class singleton {
...
public:
static T instance;
};
template <class T> T singleton<T>::instance;
Off-the-sleeve: change instance to be of type 'T' instead of 'T &'.
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