C++ static pointer to function
I would like to have a private static pointer to a function in my class. Basically, it would look like this:
//file.h
class X {
private:
static int (*staticFunc)(const X&);
...
public:
void f();
};
//file.cpp
void X::f()
{
staticFunc(*this);
}
This gives me an "unresolved external symbol" error. I know that static members must be initialized in the .cpp too, I've tried this:
int (X::*staticFunc)(const X&) = NULL;
but this gives me an "initializing a function" error. It gives me an uglier error if I try to initialize it with an existing function. Without "= NULL", I get the same开发者_JAVA百科 error.
Thanks.
//file.cpp
int (*X::staticFunc)(const X&);
void X::f()
{
staticFunc(*this);
}
It's a member of X, so you need to say
int (*X::staticFunc)(const X&) = NULL;
Otherwise, you'd just create a global variable called staticFunc
which is not related to that static member of X.
Couple problems here.
First error is that you're not passing a parameter in your attempt to use staticFunc. This should cause a compiler error that you're not reporting.
Second issue is that your syntax is wrong. TonyK got that one.
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