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1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
2 | // Name: ptr_scpd.h | |
e54c96f1 | 3 | // Purpose: interface of wxScopedPtr |
23324ae1 FM |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows license | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | /** | |
10 | @class wxScopedPtr | |
7c913512 FM |
11 | |
12 | This is a simple scoped smart pointer implementation that is similar to | |
b1b95a65 FM |
13 | the Boost smart pointers (see http://www.boost.org) but rewritten |
14 | to use macros instead. | |
7c913512 | 15 | |
23324ae1 | 16 | Since wxWidgets 2.9.0 there is also a templated version of this class |
73473b3e | 17 | with the same name. See wxScopedPtr<T>. |
7c913512 | 18 | |
23324ae1 FM |
19 | A smart pointer holds a pointer to an object. The memory used by the object is |
20 | deleted when the smart pointer goes out of scope. This class is different from | |
b1b95a65 | 21 | the @c std::auto_ptr<> in so far as it doesn't provide copy constructor |
23324ae1 | 22 | nor assignment operator. This limits what you can do with it but is much less |
cdbcf4c2 | 23 | surprizing than the "destructive copy" behaviour of the standard class. |
7c913512 | 24 | |
b1b95a65 FM |
25 | @b Example: |
26 | ||
27 | Below is an example of using a wxWidgets scoped smart pointer and pointer array. | |
28 | ||
29 | @code | |
30 | class MyClass{ ... }; | |
31 | ||
32 | // declare a smart pointer to a MyClass called wxMyClassPtr | |
33 | wxDECLARE_SCOPED_PTR(MyClass, wxMyClassPtr) | |
34 | // declare a smart pointer to an array of chars | |
35 | wxDECLARE_SCOPED_ARRAY(char, wxCharArray) | |
36 | ||
37 | ... | |
38 | ||
39 | // define the first pointer class, must be complete | |
40 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_PTR(MyClass, wxMyClassPtr) | |
41 | // define the second pointer class | |
42 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_ARRAY(char, wxCharArray) | |
43 | ||
44 | // create an object with a new pointer to MyClass | |
45 | wxMyClassPtr theObj(new MyClass()); | |
46 | // reset the pointer (deletes the previous one) | |
47 | theObj.reset(new MyClass()); | |
48 | ||
49 | // access the pointer | |
50 | theObj->MyFunc(); | |
51 | ||
52 | // create an object with a new array of chars | |
53 | wxCharArray theCharObj(new char[100]); | |
54 | ||
55 | // access the array | |
56 | theCharObj[0] = "!"; | |
57 | @endcode | |
58 | ||
59 | @section wxscopedptr_newpointers Declaring new smart pointer types | |
60 | ||
61 | To declare the smart pointer class @c CLASSNAME containing pointes to | |
62 | a (possibly incomplete) type @c TYPE you should use | |
63 | @code | |
64 | wxDECLARE_SCOPED_PTR( TYPE, // type of the values | |
65 | CLASSNAME ); // name of the class | |
66 | @endcode | |
67 | And later, when @c TYPE is fully defined, you must also use | |
68 | @code | |
69 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_PTR( TYPE, CLASSNAME ); | |
70 | @endcode | |
71 | to implement the scoped pointer class. | |
72 | ||
73 | The first argument of these macro is the pointer type, the second is the name | |
74 | of the new smart pointer class being created. Below we will use wxScopedPtr | |
75 | to represent the scoped pointer class, but the user may create the class with | |
76 | any legal name. | |
77 | ||
78 | Alternatively, if you don't have to separate the point of declaration and | |
79 | definition of this class and if you accept the standard naming convention, | |
80 | that is that the scoped pointer for the class @c Foo is called @c FooPtr, | |
81 | you can use a single macro which replaces two macros above: | |
82 | @code | |
83 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_PTR_TYPE( TYPE ); | |
84 | @endcode | |
85 | Once again, in this cass @c CLASSNAME will be @c TYPEPtr. | |
86 | ||
23324ae1 | 87 | @library{wxbase} |
b1b95a65 | 88 | @category{smartpointers} |
7c913512 | 89 | |
e54c96f1 | 90 | @see wxScopedArray |
23324ae1 | 91 | */ |
7c913512 | 92 | class wxScopedPtr |
23324ae1 FM |
93 | { |
94 | public: | |
95 | /** | |
b1b95a65 FM |
96 | Creates the smart pointer with the given pointer or none if @NULL. |
97 | ||
98 | On compilers that support it, this uses the explicit keyword. | |
23324ae1 | 99 | */ |
b1b95a65 | 100 | explicit wxScopedPtr(type* T = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
101 | |
102 | /** | |
103 | Destructor frees the pointer help by this object if it is not @NULL. | |
104 | */ | |
105 | ~wxScopedPtr(); | |
106 | ||
107 | /** | |
b1b95a65 FM |
108 | This operator gets the pointer stored in the smart pointer or returns |
109 | @NULL if there is none. | |
23324ae1 FM |
110 | */ |
111 | const T* get(); | |
112 | ||
113 | /** | |
114 | This operator works like the standard C++ pointer operator to return the object | |
b1b95a65 FM |
115 | being pointed to by the pointer. |
116 | ||
117 | @note | |
118 | If the pointer is @NULL or invalid this will crash. | |
23324ae1 | 119 | */ |
b1b95a65 | 120 | const T& operator *(); |
23324ae1 FM |
121 | |
122 | /** | |
123 | This operator works like the standard C++ pointer operator to return the pointer | |
124 | in the smart pointer or @NULL if it is empty. | |
125 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 126 | const T* operator ->(); |
23324ae1 FM |
127 | |
128 | /** | |
7c913512 | 129 | Returns the currently hold pointer and resets the smart pointer object to |
b1b95a65 FM |
130 | @NULL. |
131 | ||
132 | @remarks | |
133 | After a call to this function the caller is responsible for deleting the | |
134 | pointer. | |
23324ae1 | 135 | */ |
4cc4bfaf | 136 | T* release(); |
23324ae1 FM |
137 | |
138 | /** | |
4cc4bfaf | 139 | Deletes the currently held pointer and sets it to @a p or to @NULL if no |
b1b95a65 FM |
140 | arguments are specified. |
141 | ||
142 | @note | |
143 | This function does check to make sure that the pointer you are assigning | |
144 | is not the same pointer that is already stored. | |
23324ae1 | 145 | */ |
b1b95a65 | 146 | reset(T* p = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
147 | |
148 | /** | |
b1b95a65 | 149 | Swap the pointer inside the smart pointer with @a other. The pointer being |
23324ae1 FM |
150 | swapped must be of the same type (hence the same class name). |
151 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 152 | swap(wxScopedPtr& other); |
23324ae1 FM |
153 | }; |
154 | ||
155 | ||
e54c96f1 | 156 | |
23324ae1 FM |
157 | /** |
158 | @class wxScopedArray | |
7c913512 FM |
159 | |
160 | This is a simple scoped smart pointer array implementation that is similar to | |
b1b95a65 | 161 | the Boost smart pointers (see http://www.boost.org/) but rewritten to |
23324ae1 | 162 | use macros instead. |
7c913512 | 163 | |
b1b95a65 FM |
164 | @b Example: |
165 | ||
166 | Below is an example of using a wxWidgets scoped smart pointer and pointer array. | |
167 | ||
168 | @code | |
169 | class MyClass { ... }; | |
170 | ||
171 | // declare a smart pointer to a MyClass called wxMyClassPtr | |
172 | wxDECLARE_SCOPED_PTR(MyClass, wxMyClassPtr) | |
173 | // declare a smart pointer to an array of chars | |
174 | wxDECLARE_SCOPED_ARRAY(char, wxCharArray) | |
175 | ||
176 | ... | |
177 | ||
178 | // define the first pointer class, must be complete | |
179 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_PTR(MyClass, wxMyClassPtr) | |
180 | // define the second pointer class | |
181 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_ARRAY(char, wxCharArray) | |
182 | ||
183 | // create an object with a new pointer to MyClass | |
184 | wxMyClassPtr theObj(new MyClass()); | |
185 | // reset the pointer (deletes the previous one) | |
186 | theObj.reset(new MyClass()); | |
187 | ||
188 | // access the pointer | |
189 | theObj->MyFunc(); | |
190 | ||
191 | // create an object with a new array of chars | |
192 | wxCharArray theCharObj(new char[100]); | |
193 | ||
194 | // access the array | |
195 | theCharObj[0] = "!"; | |
196 | @endcode | |
197 | ||
198 | <b>Declaring new smart pointer types:</b> | |
199 | @code | |
200 | wxDECLAR_SCOPED_ARRAY( TYPE, // type of the values | |
201 | CLASSNAME ); // name of the class | |
202 | @endcode | |
203 | ||
204 | A smart pointer holds a pointer to an object (which must be complete when | |
205 | wxDEFINE_SCOPED_ARRAY() is called). | |
206 | ||
207 | The memory used by the object is deleted when the smart pointer goes out of | |
208 | scope. The first argument of the macro is the pointer type, the second is the | |
209 | name of the new smart pointer class being created. Below we will use wxScopedArray | |
210 | to represent the scoped pointer array class, but the user may create the class with | |
211 | any legal name. | |
212 | ||
23324ae1 | 213 | @library{wxbase} |
b1b95a65 | 214 | @category{smartpointers} |
7c913512 | 215 | |
e54c96f1 | 216 | @see wxScopedPtr |
23324ae1 | 217 | */ |
7c913512 | 218 | class wxScopedArray |
23324ae1 FM |
219 | { |
220 | public: | |
221 | /** | |
222 | Creates the smart pointer with the given pointer or none if @NULL. On | |
223 | compilers that support it, this uses the explicit keyword. | |
224 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 225 | wxScopedArray(type* T = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
226 | |
227 | /** | |
228 | This operator gets the pointer stored in the smart pointer or returns @NULL if | |
229 | there is none. | |
230 | */ | |
231 | const T* get(); | |
232 | ||
233 | /** | |
234 | This operator acts like the standard [] indexing operator for C++ arrays. The | |
235 | function does not do bounds checking. | |
236 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 237 | const T& operator [](long int i); |
23324ae1 FM |
238 | |
239 | /** | |
7c913512 | 240 | Deletes the currently held pointer and sets it to 'p' or to @NULL if no |
23324ae1 FM |
241 | arguments are specified. This function does check to make sure that the |
242 | pointer you are assigning is not the same pointer that is already stored. | |
243 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 244 | reset(T* p = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
245 | |
246 | /** | |
b1b95a65 | 247 | Swap the pointer inside the smart pointer with @a ot. The pointer being swapped |
23324ae1 FM |
248 | must be of the same type (hence the same class name). |
249 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 250 | swap(wxScopedPtr& ot); |
23324ae1 FM |
251 | }; |
252 | ||
253 | ||
e54c96f1 | 254 | |
23324ae1 FM |
255 | /** |
256 | @class wxScopedTiedPtr | |
7c913512 | 257 | |
b1b95a65 FM |
258 | This is a variation on the topic of wxScopedPtr. This class is also a smart pointer |
259 | but in addition it "ties" the pointer value to another variable. In other words, | |
260 | during the life time of this class the value of that variable is set to be the same | |
261 | as the value of the pointer itself and it is reset to its old value when the object | |
262 | is destroyed. This class is especially useful when converting the existing code | |
263 | (which may already store the pointers value in some variable) to the smart pointers. | |
7c913512 | 264 | |
23324ae1 | 265 | @library{wxbase} |
b1b95a65 | 266 | @category{smartpointers} |
23324ae1 | 267 | */ |
4a31b0c3 | 268 | class wxScopedTiedPtr : public wxScopedPtr |
23324ae1 FM |
269 | { |
270 | public: | |
271 | /** | |
4cc4bfaf | 272 | Constructor creates a smart pointer initialized with @a ptr and stores |
b1b95a65 | 273 | @a ptr in the location specified by @a ppTie which must not be @NULL. |
23324ae1 | 274 | */ |
4cc4bfaf | 275 | wxScopedTiedPtr(T** ppTie, T* ptr); |
23324ae1 FM |
276 | |
277 | /** | |
278 | Destructor frees the pointer help by this object and restores the value stored | |
279 | at the tied location (as specified in the @ref ctor() constructor) | |
280 | to the old value. | |
b1b95a65 FM |
281 | |
282 | @warning | |
283 | This location may now contain an uninitialized value if it hadn't been | |
284 | initialized previously, in particular don't count on it magically being @NULL! | |
23324ae1 FM |
285 | */ |
286 | ~wxScopedTiedPtr(); | |
287 | }; | |
288 | ||
289 | ||
e54c96f1 | 290 | |
23324ae1 | 291 | /** |
7c913512 | 292 | |
23324ae1 | 293 | A scoped pointer template class. It is the template version of |
b1b95a65 | 294 | the old-style @ref classwx_scoped_ptr "scoped pointer macros". |
7c913512 | 295 | |
23324ae1 | 296 | @library{wxbase} |
b1b95a65 | 297 | @category{smartpointers} |
7c913512 | 298 | |
73473b3e | 299 | @see wxSharedPtr<T>, wxWeakRef<T> |
23324ae1 | 300 | */ |
5cb947fd | 301 | template<typename T> |
7c913512 | 302 | class wxScopedPtr<T> |
23324ae1 FM |
303 | { |
304 | public: | |
305 | /** | |
306 | Constructor. | |
307 | */ | |
5cb947fd | 308 | wxScopedPtr(T* ptr = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
309 | |
310 | /** | |
311 | Destructor. | |
312 | */ | |
5cb947fd | 313 | ~wxScopedPtr(); |
23324ae1 FM |
314 | |
315 | /** | |
316 | Returns pointer to object or @NULL. | |
317 | */ | |
328f5751 | 318 | T* get() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
319 | |
320 | /** | |
7c913512 | 321 | Conversion to a boolean expression (in a variant which is not |
b1b95a65 FM |
322 | convertable to anything but a boolean expression). |
323 | ||
324 | If this class contains a valid pointer it will return @true, if it contains | |
325 | a @NULL pointer it will return @false. | |
23324ae1 | 326 | */ |
328f5751 | 327 | operator unspecified_bool_type() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
328 | |
329 | /** | |
b1b95a65 FM |
330 | Returns a reference to the object. |
331 | ||
332 | @note | |
333 | If the internal pointer is @NULL this method will cause an assert | |
334 | in debug mode. | |
23324ae1 | 335 | */ |
328f5751 | 336 | T operator*() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
337 | |
338 | /** | |
7c913512 | 339 | Returns pointer to object. If the pointer is @NULL this method will |
23324ae1 FM |
340 | cause an assert in debug mode. |
341 | */ | |
b1b95a65 | 342 | T* operator->() const; |
23324ae1 FM |
343 | |
344 | /** | |
345 | Releases the current pointer and returns it. | |
b1b95a65 FM |
346 | |
347 | @remarks | |
23324ae1 FM |
348 | Afterwards the caller is responsible for deleting |
349 | the data contained in the scoped pointer before. | |
350 | */ | |
351 | T* release(); | |
352 | ||
353 | /** | |
b1b95a65 FM |
354 | Reset pointer to the value of @a ptr. |
355 | The previous pointer will be deleted. | |
23324ae1 | 356 | */ |
4cc4bfaf | 357 | void reset(T* ptr = NULL); |
23324ae1 FM |
358 | |
359 | /** | |
360 | Swaps pointers. | |
361 | */ | |
4cc4bfaf | 362 | void swap(wxScopedPtr<T>& ot); |
23324ae1 | 363 | }; |
e54c96f1 | 364 |