“Undefined symbols” linker error with simple template class
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14-09-2019 - |
Question
Been away from C++ for a few years and am getting a linker error from the following code:
Gene.h
#ifndef GENE_H_INCLUDED
#define GENE_H_INCLUDED
template <typename T>
class Gene {
public:
T getValue();
void setValue(T value);
void setRange(T min, T max);
private:
T value;
T minValue;
T maxValue;
};
#endif // GENE_H_INCLUDED
Gene.cpp
#include "Gene.h"
template <typename T>
T Gene<T>::getValue() {
return this->value;
}
template <typename T>
void Gene<T>::setValue(T value) {
if(value >= this->minValue && value <= this->minValue) {
this->value = value;
}
}
template <typename T>
void Gene<T>::setRange(T min, T max) {
this->minValue = min;
this->maxValue = max;
}
Using Code::Blocks and GCC if it matters to anyone. Also, clearly porting some GA stuff to C++ for fun and practice.
Solution
The template definition (the cpp file in your code) has to be included prior to instantiating a given template class, so you either have to include function definitions in the header, or #include the cpp file prior to using the class (or do explicit instantiations if you have a limited number of them).
OTHER TIPS
Including the cpp file containing the implementations of the template class functions works. However, IMHO, this is weird and awkward. There must surely be a slicker way of doing this?
If you have only a few different instances to create, and know them beforehand, then you can use "explicit instantiation"
This works something like this:
At the top of gene.cpp add the following lines
template class Gene<int>;
template class Gene<float>;
In if(value >= this->minValue && value <= this->minValue)
the second minValue
should be maxValue
, no?
Echo what Sean said: What's the error message? You've defined and declared the functions, but you've not used them in anything anywhere, nor do I see an error (besides the typo).