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Home/ Questions/Q 4029714
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T11:22:49+00:00 2026-05-20T11:22:49+00:00

EDIT: MOTIVATION Suppose I define a Handler class as class Handler { public: class

  • 0

EDIT: MOTIVATION

Suppose I define a Handler class as

class Handler {
public:
  class Message { /*...*/ };
  typedef int (*Callback)(Message *msg);
  void registerCallback(int msgclass, Callback f);
};

A client can do

int f1(Handler::Message *msg)
{ /* handle message */ }

int f2(Handler::Message *msg)
{ /* handle message */ }

int main(){
  Handler h;
  h.registerCallback(1, f1);
  h.registerCallback(2, f2);
  // ....
}

The compiler will indeed check that f1 and f2 are appropriate as parameters to registerCallback, however, it’s up to the client to define f1 and f2 correctly. Since I’ve allready typedefed Callback, I’d like the client to be able to use it instead.

END EDIT

I’d like to do something like this:

typedef int arithmetic(int i, int j);

arithmetic sum
{
 return i+j;
}

arithmetic max
{
  return (i>j)? i:j;
}
// etc.

However, both

arithmetic sum
arithmetic sum()

don’t compile, and also this

arithmetic sum(int i, int j)

which gives compiler error of

func.cpp:4: error: ‘sum’ declared as
function returning a function

The reason I want this is that I want to have a Handler class which would provide a typedef for a callback function it accepts, including the parameter list.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T11:22:50+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 11:22 am

    First, you did not typedef a signature. A signature is everything that identifies a single function. It contains the namespace/class of the function and so on.

    What you typedef’ed is the type of a function. Like when you typedef int inttype which typedefs the type of an int, you typedef’ed the type of a function.

    You can use the typedef-name to declare functions only.

    arithmetic max; // valid
    

    But it cannot be used to define functions. For defining functions, you need to provide a parameter list literally and manually. Reasons include giving names for parameters (and possibly other, more technical reasons. C++0x introduces arithmetic max {}; which will get a specific initialization meaning).

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