Matthieu M. brought up a pattern for access-protection in this answer that i'd seen before, but never conciously considered a pattern:
class SomeKey {
friend class Foo;
SomeKey() {}
// possibly make it non-copyable too
};
class Bar {
public:
void protectedMethod(SomeKey);
};
...
@DeadMG It has benefits: people can point to existing discussion on same the subject
It's not about "patterns" being magically more important. It's about recognizing when something has been done before and not reinventing/falling to the same traps
I hate sharing containers etc. I will do almost anything to avoid it. The only things I am happy sharing are synchro primitives, producer-consumer queues and the like. If there is a large container, I manage it with one thread, (and maybe state-machine), and queue up requests to that thread.
@DeadMG Well, I guess changing profession would work :) I would like to work in an Indian restaurant for a year - where the containers have only good food in them :)
Ohai robot, did you see Andrzej's blog post? Now only Herb/Andrei need to mention this in passing and this subject will be well and truly beaten to death. Still, interesting to see everyone coming up with slightly different 'tastes' and preferences. (@R.MartinhoFernandes )
Ah well, in that case, just leave it as is. People should know. And -Wextra -Weffc++ should tell people who don't know what order members are initialized.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh damn. I did it again. Sorry... At least I got the link right
@MarcClaesen You mean, it has human members. Oh well.
@StackedCrooked Except that, really it isn't too good to be true. It's just way above average. But considering the amount of time invested, it's not beyond belief.
@EvgenyPanasyuk Should I have to explain that there is a 'double-ended queue' abstraction in the standard library (when!?!? why?!?!?) then, yes, I'd say it in full. With context and intent.
@Jefffrey Keeping the caveats other people mentioned about it (specifically, if the ID needs to leave your address space, this is not good), you can just void const* id() const { return this; }.
@R.MartinhoFernandes working from remote desktop, so I can't print form there. Had Word already open, so just ctrl+n and paste... then took note of just how much there was :P