El 09/09/2021 a las 15:21, John Emmas escribió:
On 09/09/2021 12:16, Joaquin M López Muñoz via Boost-users wrote:
[...] if you mean for the elements to be allowed in both lists at the same time, use tags:
#include <boost/intrusive/list.hpp> #include <string> #include <utility>
typedef boost::intrusive::list_base_hook<boost::intrusive::tag<struct animal_tag>> animals_hook; typedef boost::intrusive::list_base_hook<boost::intrusive::tag<struct dog_tag>> dogs_hook;
class animal : public animals_hook, public dogs_hook { public: animal (std::string n, int l) : name{std::move(n)}, legs{l} {}
std::string name; int legs; };
typedef boost::intrusive::list<animal,boost::intrusive::base_hook<animals_hook>> Animals; typedef boost::intrusive::list<animal,boost::intrusive::base_hook<dogs_hook>> Dogs;
int main() { animal a1{"labrador", 4}; animal a2{"bulldog", 4};
Animals animals; animals.push_back (a2); // <--- 'bulldog' works okay
Dogs dogs; dogs.push_back (a1); // <--- 'labrador' works okay dogs.push_back (a2); // <--- 'bulldog' works okay
return 0; } [portion above moved from end of post]
Please don't top post. Thank you! https://www.boost.org/community/policy.html
Thanks Joaquin - one quick question... do I need to define 'struct animal_tag' and 'struct dog_tag' somewhere?
No, this is not needed.
At present, your code compiles and links okay but I still see a runtime crash at the same line ('dogs.push_back (a2);')
It seems to work for me: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/d605f0b3bccfe9fa Please note that dogs in line 29 is defined as: Dogs dogs; whereas in your original code this was: Animals dogs; Maybe this is the problem? Joaquín M López Muñoz