Creating a boost::thread with boost::bind() or without
As you can see by the code below that compile and gives the expected output, boost::bind is completely unnecessary for using boost::thread with free functions, member functions and static member functions:
#include <boost/thread/thread.hpp>
#include <iostream>
void FreeFunction()
{
std::cout << "hello from free function" << std::endl;
}
struct SomeClass
{
void MemberFunction()
{
std::cout << "hello from member function" << std::endl;
}
static void StaticFunction()
{
std::cout << "hello from static member function" << std::endl;
}
};
int main()
{
SomeClass someClass;
// this free function will be used internally as is
boost::thread t1(&FreeFunction);
t1.join();
// this static member function will be used internally as is
boost::thread t2(&SomeClass::StaticFunction);
t2.join();
// boost::bind will be called on this member function internally
boost::thread t3(&SomeClass::MemberFunction, someClass);
t3.join();
}
Output:
hello from free function
hello from static member function
hello from member function
The internal bind in the constructor does all the work for you.
Just added a few extra comments on what happens with each function type. (Hopefully I've read the source correctly!) As far as I can see, using boost::bind externally will not cause it to also double up and be called internally as it will pass through as is.
There is no difference - thread
contructor uses bind
internally.
People use bind
explicitly for historical reasons, because Boost.Thread didn't have a "binding" constructor before 1.36.