C++ typedef member function signature syntax
You can factor out the target class in modern C++ (post 11) by utilizing the 'typedefing' qualities of template aliases. What you need would look like like:
template<typename T>
using memberf_pointer = int (T::*)(int, int);
Yet at the point of declaration, a pointer to member function utilizing this syntax would need to specify the target class:
// D is a member function taking (int, int) and returning int
memberf_pointer<foo> mp = &foo::D;
The reason it doesn't work with your current syntax is that operator precedence dictates that you're referring to a function named foo::memberf_signature
, not any sort of type.
I don't know for sure if you can do this or not, but I couldn't come up with any combination of parenthese that induced the code to compile with g++ 4.2.
For questions regarding the awkward function pointer syntax, I personally use a cheat-sheet: The Function Pointers Tutorial (downloadable here, thanks to Vector for pointing it out).
The signature of a member function, however, is a bit different from the signature of a regular function, as you experienced.
As you probably know, a member function has a hidden parameter, this
, whose type need be specified.
// C++11 and above.
using Member = int (Foo::*)(int, int);
// C++03 and below.
typedef int (Foo::*Member)(int, int);
does let you specify that the first element passed to the function will be a Foo*
(and thus your method really takes 3 arguments, when you think of it, not just 2.
However there is another reason too, for forcing you to specify the type.
A function pointer might refer to a virtual function, in which case things can get quite complicated. Therefore, the very size of the in-memory representation changes depending on the type of function. Indeed, on Visual Studio, a function pointer's size might vary between 1 and 4 times the size of a regular pointer. This depends on whether the function is virtual, notably.
Therefore, the class the function refers to is part of the signature, and there is no work-around.
It works for me:
#include <iostream>
class foo
{
public:
int g (int x, int y) { return x + y ; }
} ;
typedef int (foo::*memberf_pointer)(int, int);
int main()
{
foo f ;
memberf_pointer mp = &foo::g ;
std::cout << (f.*mp) (5, 8) << std::endl ;
}