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Home/ Questions/Q 3319138
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T22:47:22+00:00 2026-05-17T22:47:22+00:00

Let’s say I have a template: template <class N, class I> void add(N* element,

  • 0

Let’s say I have a template:

template <class N, class I>
void add(N* element, std::list<N*> & container, I (N::*f)() const,
        std::string successmsg, std::string exceptmsg) {
//...
}

And I want to call it for a list of Base Class pointers to a derivative class.

add(newAirplane, airplanes, &Airplane::getRegistration,
        "Added!", "Error: Existent!");

Airplane inherits from AirplaneType.

Of course, it doesn’t compile, N is first defined as AirplaneType and then as Airplane.

I added a virtual getRegistration @ AirplaneType but of course, the compiler gives out a vtable error.

What’s the proper way to solve this? AirplaneType has no registration attribute and I’m not interested in it having one. I also wanted to avoid virtual getRegistration() const {return "";}

Any suggestions for good practice?

EDIT:

Thanks for answers, but still not working. I think I have found the remaining problem, but not its solution:

void Airline::addAirplane(AirplaneType* airplane) {
add(newAirplane, airplanes, &Airplane::getRegistration,
        "Added!", "Error: Existent!");

}

The type of pointer received is AirplaneType, not Airplane.

airplanes is a list of AirplaneType pointers.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T22:47:22+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 10:47 pm

    You need another template parameter, because you care about two different classes – the type of the pointer (and hence the member function you’re going to call with it), and the type of the container:

    #include <list>
    
    struct AirplaneType {
    };
    
    struct Airplane : AirplaneType {
        int check() const { return 3; }
    };
    
    template <typename T, typename U, typename I>
    void add(T* element, std::list<U*> & container, I (T::*f)() const) {
        container.push_back(element);
        I i = (element->*f)();
    }
    
    int main() {
        std::list<AirplaneType*> ls;
        Airplane a;
        add(&a, ls, &Airplane::check);
    }
    

    In this case my add function doesn’t really use the fact that container is a list, so a more sensible version might be:

    template <typename T, typename U, typename I>
    void add(T* element, U & container, I (T::*f)() const) {
        container.push_back(element);
        I i = (element->*f)();
    }
    

    And then again, you could abstract further:

    template <typename T, typename U, typename AUF>
    void add(T element, U & container, AUF func) {
        container.push_back(element);
        typename AUF::result_type i = func(element);
    }
    

    … but that’s slightly less convenient for the caller:

    #include <functional>
    
    add(&a, ls, std::mem_fun(&Airplane::check));
    

    Any suggestions for good practice?

    Don’t create containers of raw pointers.

    Edit: to get this working with a virtual function, with each of my options:

    #include <list>
    #include <functional>
    #include <iostream>
    
    struct AirplaneType {
        virtual int check() const { return 0; }
    };
    
    struct Airplane : AirplaneType {
        int check() const { std::cout << "check\n"; return 3; }
    };
    
    template <typename T, typename U, typename I>
    void add(U* element, std::list<T*> & container, I (U::*f)() const) {
        container.push_back(element);
        I i = (element->*f)();
    }
    
    template <typename T, typename U, typename AUF>
    void add2(T element, U & container, AUF func) {
        container.push_back(element);
        typename AUF::result_type i = func(element);
    }
    
    int main() {
        std::list<AirplaneType*> ls;
        Airplane a;
        add(static_cast<AirplaneType*>(&a), ls, &AirplaneType::check);
        add2(&a, ls, std::mem_fun(&AirplaneType::check));
    }
    

    Output is:

    check
    check
    

    which shows that the override is correctly called even though the function pointer was taken to AirplaneType::check, not Airplane::check.

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