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19:48
Hi i have a question
i have a std::function inside a class and a vector of objects from this class
can i make function implement code different for each object?
20:08
yeah that's half the point of std::function
 
2 hours later…
22:29
??
half the point?
std::function is a wrapper to the classic function pointer+context pointer that includes proper RAII semantics
i have a class like this:
class someClass
{
public:
int a,b;
std::function<void()> doSomething = [](){};
}
And some objects:
someClass obj1;
someClass obj2;
someClass obj3;

can i do:
obj1.doSomething = [obj1]() {
a = 10;
b = 10;
};
obj2.doSomething = [obj2]() {
a = 20;
b = 20;
}

obj1.doSomething();

Will obj1.a and obj1.b be 10 and 10?
nwp
nwp
22:45
Those don't compile. There is no a or b in those lambdas.
You need something like [&obj] {obj.a = 10; obj.b = 10; };. And even then you need to call the function before anything changes.
oh yes i forgot while typing here
i was creating an example
and yes i mean like you wrote
@nwp need to call the function before anything changes? so if i implement obj2.doSomething function, obj1.doSomething function will be overwritten?
i hope not
nwp
nwp
23:06
@DiCri What? No, obj1.doSomething and obj2.doSomething are different objects. I meant that obj1.doSomething = [&obj = obj1] {obj.a = 10; obj.b = 10; }; doesn't change obj1.a. You need to do obj1.doSomething(); for that.

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