I have a member function which is declared const and modifies data via a pointer. This seems misleading. Should I remove the const keyword?
I would like to know how others handle this situation in their code. Do people just add a comment to clarify what is going on? Do they not add the const keyword to the member function? Maybe something else completely?
Any advice is appreciated.
You have essentially two choices:
Deep constness:
Shallow constness:
It’s really up to you, and to the purpose of your class. If the class is a smart pointer, it would seem reasonable to have shallow constness semantics, since the class is supposed to be as similar to a raw pointer as possible (and you can of course have a constant raw pointer to a non-constant pointee).
Otherwise, you should ask yourself why you would be exposing access to a member pointer object at all. It’s certainly possible that you want to give mutable access via constant references to your class, but I imagine those are special and rare circumstances. There shouldn’t really be that many raw pointers in your code in the first place. Returning a deeply-const reference by dereferencing a pointer should be fine, but usually in better encapsulated “getter” functions which hide the fact that there is a pointer inside your class, like
T const & get() const { return *ptr; }.