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Home/ Questions/Q 120425
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T03:48:34+00:00 2026-05-11T03:48:34+00:00

When using the std::for_each, class A; vector<A*> VectorOfAPointers; std::for_each(VectorOfAPointers.begin(), VectorOfAPointers.end(), std::mem_fun(&A::foo)); If we have

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When using the std::for_each,

class A; vector<A*> VectorOfAPointers;  std::for_each(VectorOfAPointers.begin(), VectorOfAPointers.end(), std::mem_fun(&A::foo)); 

If we have classes inheriting from A and implementing foo(), and we hold a vector of pointers to A, is there any way to call a polymorphic call on foo(), rather then explicitly calling A::foo()? Note: I can’t use boost, only standard STL.

Thanks, Gal

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  1. 2026-05-11T03:48:34+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 3:48 am

    It actually works this way.

    #include <algorithm> #include <iostream> #include <functional> #include <vector>  struct A {     virtual void foo() {         std::cout << 'A::foo()' << std::endl;     } }; struct B: public A {     virtual void foo() {         std::cout << 'B::foo()' << std::endl;     } };  int main() {     std::vector<A*> VectorOfAPointers;     VectorOfAPointers.push_back(new B());     std::for_each(VectorOfAPointers.begin(), VectorOfAPointers.end(), std::mem_fun(&A::foo));     return 0; } 

    prints

    B::foo() 

    So it does exactly what you want. Check that virtual keywords are present though, it’s easy to forget them.

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