Suppose, if a conversion from one type another type is not available through explicit casts e.g static_cast
, Would it be possible to define explicit conversion operators for it?
Edit:
I'm looking for a way to define explicit conversion operators for the following:
class SmallInt {
public:
// The Default Constructor
SmallInt(int i = 0): val(i) {
if (i < 0 || i > 255)
thro开发者_StackOverflow社区w std::out_of_range("Bad SmallInt initializer");
}
// Conversion Operator
operator int() const {
return val;
}
private:
std::size_t val;
};
int main()
{
SmallInt si(100);
int i = si; // here, I want an explicit conversion.
}
For user defined types you can define a type cast operator. The syntax for the operator is
operator <return-type>()
You should also know that implicit type cast operators are generally frowned upon because they might allow the compiler too much leeway and cause unexpected behavior. Instead you should define to_someType()
member functions in your class to perform the type conversion.
Not sure about this, but I believe C++0x allows you to specify a type cast is explicit
to prevent implicit type conversions.
In the current standard, conversions from your type to a different type cannot be marked explicit
, which make sense up to some extent: if you want to explicitly convert you can always provide a function that implements the conversion:
struct small_int {
int value();
};
small_int si(10);
int i = si.value(); // explicit in some sense, cannot be implicitly converted
Then again, it might not make that much sense, since in the upcoming standard, if your compiler supports it, you can tag the conversion operator as explicit
:
struct small_int {
explicit operator int();
};
small_int si(10);
// int i = si; // error
int i = (int)si; // ok: explicit conversion
int j = static_cast<int>(si); // ok: explicit conversion
If this is what you want, you can define conversion operators, e.g.:
void foo (bool b) {}
struct S {
operator bool () {return true;} // convert to a bool
};
int main () {
S s;
foo (s); // call the operator bool.
}
Although it is not really recommended because once defined, such implicit conversion can occur in awkward places where you don't expect it.
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