While trying to get comfortable with boost, stumbled into problem with using boost::function along with std::vector. I’m trying to do a simple thing: have a list of functions with similair signatures and then use all that functions with std::for_each on sample data. Here is the code:
typedef boost::function<int (const char*)> text_processor;
typedef std::vector<text_processor> text_processors;
text_processors processors;
processors.push_back(std::atoi);
processors.push_back(std::strlen);
const char data[] = "123";
std::for_each(processors.begin(), processors.end(),
std::cout << boost::bind(&text_processors::value_type::operator(), _1, data)
<< "\n"
);
So, with for_each I’m trying to write to standard output the result of applying every function to sample data. But it won’t compile like this (some long message about missing operator << for bind result).
If I remove stream operators then I’ll have compilable, but useless code. The trick is that I want to do function applying and text output in single for_each. What am I missing? Thought it should be easy with lambdas or smth like that, but can’t figure out the correct solution.
The problem with your code is that you are trying to create a functor in place in a way that is not allowed (you cannot just throw code at the third argument of
for_each, you need to pass a functor).Without lambda support in the compiler you can use
std::transformrather thanstd::for_each(not tested… but this should work):If your compiler supports lambdas you can do with it:
But then you can avoid the
bindaltogether: