I’m used to seeing syntax like this for function pointers
int (*pointer_name) (float, char *);
void call_function (void (*)(int), int);
In some C++03 functional libraries I see types used this way:
abc::function<void(*)(int,float)> f;
In C++11’s std::function I see the type given this way
std::function<void(int,float)> f;
There is a missing (*). Why?
The C++03 function<T> has T being an identical type to the corresponding function pointer. It’s easy to imagine the implementation.
std::function in C++11 is supported by core language enhancements. Have template argument types been extended to accomodate callability?
std::function(and its inspiration,boost::function) does not only store function pointers. It can also store function objects. In that sense, passing a function signature as a template parameter is similar to how a smart pointer usually take the type of the pointee as a template parameter, not a pointer type!Contrast:
with
This is a useful convention.