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Home/ Questions/Q 1007843
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T08:40:46+00:00 2026-05-16T08:40:46+00:00

Edit : Note that my final purpose here is not having the class working,

  • 0

Edit:
Note that my final purpose here is not having the class working, is just learning more about templates 🙂

Suppose you have a template class which implements a vector:

template <typename T>
class Vector
{
    public:
        Vector(size_t dim) {
            dimension = dim;
            elements = new T[dim];
        }
        /* Here more stuff, like operator[] etc... */
    private:
        size_t dimension;
        T * elements;
}

And suppose you want to build a matrix with it. A matrix is just a vector of vectors, thus it can be designed as follows:

template <typename T>
class Matrix : public Vector<Vector<T> >
{
    /*...*/
}

And here comes trouble: In the constructor I need to provide rows and columns as parameter to the internal vectors. It should be something like

template <typename T>
Matrix<T>::Matrix (size_t ncols, size_t nrows)
         : Vector<Vector<T> > /* Here I need to specify size for both
                               * internal and external vectors */
{
}

Obviously I cannot write Vector<Vector<T>(nrows)>(ncols), but that’s what I would need!

A possible solution would be including size inside the template:

template <typename T, size_t N>
class Vector
{
    public:
        Vector() {
            elements = new T[N];
        }
        /* Here more stuff, like operator[] etc... */
    private:
        T * elements;
}

Hence I would no longer need constructor parameters, but this also forces me to write clumsy code with templates everywhere (by exmample, every function using a Vector should be declared as

template <typename T, size_t N>
void foo (Vector<T,N> &vec) {...}

Do you have better solutions?

EDIT:

As solution I took inspiration from Mr Fooz’s and chubsdad’s posts. That’s how I fixed the problem:

/* The RowAccess class is just an array wrapper which raises an exception
 * if you go out of bounds */
template <typename T>
class RowAccess
{
    public:

        RowAccess (T * values, unsigned cols) : values(vals), cols(c) {}

        T & operator[] (unsigned i) throw (MatrixError) {
            if (i < cols) return values[i];
            else throw MatrixError("Column out of bound");
        }

    private:
        T * values;
        unsigned cols;
};

template <typename T>
class Matrix
{
    public:
        Matrix (unsigned rows, unsigned cols) {...}
        virtual ~Matrix () {...}

        RowAccess<T> operator[] (unsigned row) {
            if (row < rows) return RowAccess<T>(values + cols * row, cols);
            else throw MatrixError("Row out of boundary");
        }

    private:
        unsigned rows;
        unsigned cols;
        T * values;
};

Thanks a lot to everyone!

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T08:40:46+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 8:40 am

    This isn’t what you asked, but there’s a good chance the matrix would be better of implemented as a single linear vector where you provide high-level access methods that do the indexing (e.g. elmLoc=row*ncols+col). This way you don’t need to create and initialize a vector of vectors. You also don’t need to worry about accidentally having some inner vectors of the differing size. All dense matrix implementations I have ever used use a single linear vector as the underlying implementation.

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