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Home/ Questions/Q 3312994
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T22:03:47+00:00 2026-05-17T22:03:47+00:00

Suppose I have the following classes: class X; class Y; class Collection { public:

  • 0

Suppose I have the following classes:

class X;
class Y;

class Collection
{
   public:
      virtual void AddItemX(X*) = 0;
      virtual void AddItemY(Y*) = 0;
      //So on...
};

class Collector
{
   public:
      virtual void Fill(Collection&) = 0;
};

Is there any way to ensure that an implementation of Collector class will fill all the needed items in the passed Collection class?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T22:03:47+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 10:03 pm

    One method, given a known number of AddItemX() calls is to move those AddItem() functions to protected and have the Collection class keep track of the additions and the number, e.g:

    (I actually don’t like this solution, lol, but given your design it would suffice:)

    class X;
    class Y;
    
    class Collection
    {
    private:
        int m_nItems;
        int m_nItemsAdded;
    
    protected:
        virtual void AddItemXImpl(X&) = 0;
        virtual void AddItemYImpl(Y&) = 0;
    
    public:
        Collection() : m_nItems(2), m_nItemsAdded(0){};
    
        void AddItemX(X& _x) {m_nMethodsAdded++; AddItemXImpl(_x); };
        void AddItemY(Y& _y) {m_nMethodsAdded++; AddItemYImpl(_y); };
    
        // function to find out if we're filled
        bool isFilled() const {return(m_nItemsAdded == m_nItems); };
    }; // eo class Collection
    

    EDIT: For clarification, your Collector could be implemented thusly:

    class Collector
    {
    protected:
        virtual void FillImpl(Collection& _collection) = 0;
    
    public:
        void Fill(Collection& _collection)
        {
            FillImpl(_collection);
            if(!_collection.isFilled())
                throw(std::exception("Not filled dammit!"));
        };
    }; // eo class Collector
    
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