Base-from-Member
More C++ Idioms/Base-from-Member
NOTE: 充分利用order of initialization即“base classes are initialized in the order they are declared”,引入一个class来初始化基类的constructor中需要使用的variable,并且保证这个类的次序在基类之前。
In C++, base classes are initialized before any member of the derived classes. The reason for this is that members of a derived class may use base part of the object. Therefore, all the base parts (i.e., all the base classes) must be initialized before members of the derived class. Sometimes, however, it becomes necessary to initialize a base class from a data member that is available only in the derived class. It sounds contradictory to the rules of C++ language because the parameter (a member of derived class) that is passed to the base class constructor must be fully initialized. This creates circular initialization problem (an infinite regress).
The following code, obtained from Boost[1] library, shows the problem.
#include <streambuf> // for std::streambuf
#include <ostream> // for std::ostream
namespace std {
class streambuf;
class ostream {
explicit ostream(std::streambuf * buf);
//...
};
}
class fdoutbuf // A customization of streambuf
: public std::streambuf
{
public:
explicit fdoutbuf( int fd );
//...
};
class fdostream
: public std::ostream
{
protected:
fdoutbuf buf;
public:
explicit fdostream( int fd )
: buf( fd ), std::ostream( &buf )
// This is not allowed: buf can't be initialized before std::ostream.
// std::ostream needs a std::streambuf object defined inside fdoutbuf.
{}
};
NOTE: 下面是对上述程序的改写,以使它能够编译
class streambuf
{
};
class ostream {
public:
explicit ostream(streambuf * buf)
{
}
//...
};
class fdoutbuf // A customization of streambuf
: public streambuf
{
public:
explicit fdoutbuf( int fd )
{
}
//...
};
class fdostream
: public ostream
{
protected:
fdoutbuf buf;
public:
explicit fdostream( int fd )
: buf( fd ), ostream( &buf )
// This is not allowed: buf can't be initialized before std::ostream.
// std::ostream needs a std::streambuf object defined inside fdoutbuf.
{}
};
int main()
{
fdostream f(1);
}
NOTE:
一、上述代码是能够编译通过的,
g++ test.cpp -fpermissive
二、上述code的问题在于:
class fdostream : public ostream { protected: fdoutbuf buf; public: explicit fdostream( int fd ) : buf( fd ), ostream( &buf ) // This is not allowed: buf can't be initialized before std::ostream. // std::ostream needs a std::streambuf object defined inside fdoutbuf. {} };
ostream( &buf )
是典型的使用子类的成员去初始化base class:1、
fdostream
的initialization依赖于 base classostream
,而base classostream
的initialization又依赖于fdostream
的member variablebuf
, 它就形成了circle dependency
The above code snippet shows a case where the programmer is interested in customizing the std::streambuf
class. He/she does so in fdoutbuf
by inheriting from std::streambuf
. The fdoutbuf
class is used as a member in fdostream
class, which is-a kind of std::ostream
. The std::ostream
class, however, needs a pointer to a std::streambuf
class, or its derived class. The type of pointer to buf
is suitable but passing it makes sense only if buf
is initialized. However, it won’t be initialized unless all base classes are initialized. Hence the infinite regress. The base-from-member idiom addresses this problem.
Solution and Sample Code
This idiom makes use of the fact that base classes are initialized in the order they are declared. The derived class controls the order of its base classes, and in turn, controls the order in which they are initialized. In this idiom, a new class is added just to initialize the member in the derived class that is causing the problem. This new class is introduced in the base-class-list before all other base classes. Because the new class comes before the base class that needs the fully constructed parameter, it is initialized first and then the reference can be passed as usual. Here is the solution using base-from-member idiom.
#include <streambuf> // for std::streambuf
#include <ostream> // for std::ostream
class fdoutbuf
: public std::streambuf
{
public:
explicit fdoutbuf(int fd)
{
//...
}
};
struct fdostream_pbase // A newly introduced class
{
fdoutbuf sbuffer; // The member moved 'up' the hierarchy.
explicit fdostream_pbase(int fd)
: sbuffer(fd)
{}
};
class fdostream
: protected fdostream_pbase // This class will be initialized before the next one.
, public std::ostream
{
public:
explicit fdostream(int fd)
: fdostream_pbase(fd), // Initialize the newly added base before std::ostream.
std::ostream(&sbuffer) // Now safe to pass the pointer
{}
//...
};
int main(void)
{
fdostream standard_out(1);
standard_out << "Hello, World\n";
return 0;
}
The fdostream_pbase
class is the newly introduced class that now has the sbuffer
member. The fdostream
class inherits from this new class and adds it before std::ostream
in its base class list. This ensures that sbuffer
is initialized before and the pointer can be passed safely to the std::ostream
constructor.