I have been using C# for a while now, and going back to C++ is a headache. I am trying to get some of my practices from C# with me to C++, but I am finding some resistance and I would be glad to accept your help.
I would like to expose an iterator for a class like this:
template <class T> class MyContainer { public: // Here is the problem: // typedef for MyIterator without exposing std::vector publicly? MyIterator Begin() { return mHiddenContainerImpl.begin(); } MyIterator End() { return mHiddenContainerImpl.end(); } private: std::vector<T> mHiddenContainerImpl; };
Am I trying at something that isn’t a problem? Should I just typedef std::vector< T >::iterator? I am hoping on just depending on the iterator, not the implementing container…
You may find the following article interesting as it addresses exactly the problem you have posted: On the Tension Between Object-Oriented and Generic Programming in C++ and What Type Erasure Can Do About It