In C++, I want to be able to call a method in the same class without creating an object of the whole class. The class is huge and I do not want to create a huge memory location for an object. I am used to programming in C#.
In C# I could do this
class test()
{
private void A()
{
B();
}
private void B()
{
doSomething;
}
}
in C++ I am under the impression I have to do.
class test()
{
public:
static void A();
void B();
};
void test::A()
{
test t;
t.B();
}
void test::B()
{
doSomething;
}
}
I do not want to make B() static nor do I want to create and object of test because in reality my class is a lot larger than this, and creating a object of the class would use memory that I do not want to.
Is there a way I can accomplish what I could in C# in C++?
No. If B needs an object, you have to give it an object. If B doesn’t need an object, declare it
static. C# is no different — in your example,Ais not static so the object already exists.