I am trying the following...
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
template<class T>
class Singleton
{
private:
class InstPtr
{
public:
InstPtr() : m_ptr(0) {}
~InstPtr() { delete m_ptr; }
T* get() { return m_ptr; }
void set(T* p)
{
if (p != 0)
{
delete m_ptr;
m_ptr = p;
}
}
private:
T* m_ptr;
};
static InstPtr ptr;
Singleton();
Singleton(const Singleton&);
Singleton& operator=(const Singleton&);
public:
static T* instance()
{
if (ptr.get() == 0)
{
ptr.set(new T());
}
return ptr.get();
}
};
class ABC
{
public:
ABC() {}
void print(void) { cout << "Hello World" << endl; }
};
When I am trying to do the following in visual studio, it works fine.. But when I compile using g++, it fails with specializing member ‘Singleton<ABC>::ptr’ requires ‘template<>’ syntax
. What I am missing here?
#define ABCD (*(Singleton<ABC>::instance()))
template<> Singleton<ABC>::InstPtr Singleton<ABC>::ptr;
Singleton<ABC>::InstPtr Singleton<ABC>::ptr;
int main(void)
{
ABCD.print();
return 0;
}
Singleton<ABC>::InstPtr Singleton<ABC>::ptr;
should be used for defining the static
member of a explicitly specialized class template, e.g.
template<class T>
class Singleton
{
...
};
// explicit specialization
template<>
class Singleton<ABC>
{
private:
class InstPtr
{
...
};
static InstPtr ptr;
...
};
Singleton<ABC>::InstPtr Singleton<ABC>::ptr; // definition of the static member
And, the explicit specialization of a static
data member like
template<> Singleton<ABC>::InstPtr Singleton<ABC>::ptr;
is a declaration, but not a definition.
You need to specify initializer for it, e.g.
template<> Singleton<ABC>::InstPtr Singleton<ABC>::ptr{}; // definition of the static member
An explicit specialization of a static data member of a template is a definition if the declaration includes an initializer; otherwise, it is a declaration. These definitions must use braces for default initialization:
template<> X Q<int>::x; // declaration of a static member template<> X Q<int>::x (); // error: function declaration template<> X Q<int>::x {}; // definition of a default-initialized static member