16

Please refer the following code snippet. I want to use the std::bind for overloaded function foobar. It calls only the method with no arguments.

#include <functional>
#include <iostream>
class Client
{  
  public :  
  void foobar(){std::cout << "no argument" << std::endl;}
  void foobar(int){std::cout << "int argument" << std::endl;}
  void foobar(double){std::cout << "double argument" << std::endl;}
};

int main()
{
    Client cl;  
    //! This works 
    auto a1 = std::bind(static_cast<void(Client::*)(void)>(&Client::foobar),cl);
    a1();
    //! This does not
    auto a2= [&](int)
    {
        std::bind(static_cast<void(Client::*)(int)>(&Client::foobar),cl);
    };
    a2(5);
    return 0;
}
none
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Atul
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1 Answers1

18

You need to use placeholders for the unbound arguments:

auto a2 = std::bind(static_cast<void(Client::*)(int)>(&Client::foobar), cl,
                    std::placeholders::_1);
a2(5);

You can also perform the binding with a lambda capture (note that this is binds cl by reference, not by value):

auto a2 = [&](int i) { cl.foobar(i); };
ecatmur
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