I would like to have several types that share the same implementation but still are of different type in C++.
To illustrate my question with a simple example, I would like to have a class for Apples, Oranges and Bananas, all having the same operations and same implementation. I would like them to have different types because I want to avoid errors thanks to type-safety.
class Apple {
int p;
public:
Apple (int p) : p(p) {}
int price () const {return p;}
}
class Banana {
int p;
public:
Banana (int p) : p(p) {}
int price () const {return p;}
}
class Orange ...
In order not duplicating code, it looks like I could use a base class Fruit and inherit from it:
class Fruit {
int p;
public:
Fruit (int p) : p(p) {}
int price () const {return p;}
}
class Apple: public Fruit {};
class Banana: public Fruit {};
class Orange: public Fruit {};
But then, the constructors are not inherited and I have to rewrite them.
Is there any mechanism (typedefs, templates, inheritance…) that would allow me to easily have the same class with different types?
A common technique is to have a class template where the template argument simply serves as a unique token (“tag”) to make it a unique type:
Note that the tag classes don’t even need to be defined, it’s enough to declare a unique type name. This works because the tag isn’s actually used anywhere in the template. And you can declare the type name inside the template argument list (hat tip to @Xeo).
The
usingsyntax is C++11. If you’re stuck with C++03, write this instead:If the common functionality takes up a lot of code this unfortunately introduces quite a lot of duplicate code in the final executable. This can be prevented by having a common base class implementing the functionality, and then having a specialisation (that you actually instantiate) that derives from it.
Unfortunately, that requires you to re-implement all non-inheritable members (constructors, assignment …) which adds a small overhead itself – so this only makes sense for large classes. Here it is applied to the above example: