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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T15:05:49+00:00 2026-05-14T15:05:49+00:00

I’m looking at boost::lambda as a way to to make a generic algorithm that

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I’m looking at boost::lambda as a way to to make a generic algorithm that can work with any “getter” method of any class.

The algorithm is used to detect duplicate values of a property, and I would like for it to work for any property of any class.

In C#, I would do something like this:

class Dummy
{
    public String GetId() ...
    public String GetName() ...
}

IEnumerable<String> FindNonUniqueValues<ClassT>
  (Func<ClassT,String> propertyGetter) { ... }

Example use of the method:

var duplicateIds   = FindNonUniqueValues<Dummy>(d => d.GetId());
var duplicateNames = FindNonUniqueValues<Dummy>(d => d.GetName());

I can get the for “any class” part to work, using either interfaces or template methods, but have not found yet how to make the “for any method” part work.

Is there a way to do something similar to the “d => d.GetId()” lambda in C++ (either with or without Boost)?

Alternative, more C++ian solutions to make the algorithm generic are welcome too.

I’m using C++/CLI with VS2008, so I can’t use C++0x lambdas.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T15:05:50+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:05 pm

    Assuming, I understand what you’re looking for, you can use boost::bind:

    FindNonUniqueValues<Dummy>(boost::bind(&Dummy::GetId, _1));
    

    Actually, you just need boost::mem_fn or even std::mem_fun, but boost::bind will allow you a bit more generality.

    In this case, you would define FindNonUniqueValues as something like:

    template <typename T>
    /* ? */ FindNonUniqueValues(boost::function<std::string (const T&)> getter) { ... }
    

    Here, I’m not really sure how your FindNonUniqueValues gets its list of objects (or exactly what it’s supposed to return – is an IEnumerable like an iterator?), so you could fill that in.

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