Question

Please refer to Wikipedia:Strategy Pattern (C++)

class Context
{
    private:
        StrategyInterface * strategy_;

    public:
        explicit Context(StrategyInterface *strategy):strategy_(strategy)
        {
        }

        void set_strategy(StrategyInterface *strategy)
        {
            strategy_ = strategy;
        }

        void execute() const
        {
            strategy_->execute();
        }
};

Why it is a good practice to use explicit for the constructor of Context?

Thank you

Was it helpful?

Solution

Well, explicit constructors are always safe, but can be inconvenient. explicit ensures a compilation error should you provide a StrategyInterface* where a Context is expected. In doing so, it prevents construction of a temporary Context. This becomes particularly important in certain circumstances, e.g.:

  • Context takes ownership of the pointed-to StrategyInterface, and deletes it in the destructor
  • Context construction/destruction performs other expensive or inappropriate actions
  • it disambiguates some operations implicitly, and makes others ambiguous, where it might be more appropriate to have the programmer consider how to resolve the ambiguity (e.g. should an attempt to compare a Context and a StrategyInterface* produce a compile-time error, result in comparing StrategyInterface*s, StrategyInterfaces or Contexts?)

If a Context is practically a drop-in-replacement for a StrategyInterface, just with some minor logging or other enhancements, then it may be appropriate to allow implicit construction, much as std::string can be constructed from const char*. When they're clearly independent things, or when the lifetime of a Context should exist beyond any given usage of a StrategyInterface, then an explicit constructor's indicated.

(Note: these guidelines are pretty rough - more a starting point than an end - comments welcome)

OTHER TIPS

Because it's generally a good idea to use explicit unless you really want to allow implicit conversion. Since you're unlikely to use a Context object in a situation where you really gain anything from an implicit conversion, you're better off making it explicit.

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