vicente.botet | 15 Jan 21:29
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Re: Futures - wait callback with a user specific parameter.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "vicente.botet" <vicente.botet <at> wanadoo.fr>
To: <boost <at> lists.boost.org>
Sent: Thursday, January 15, 2009 6:47 PM
Subject: Re: [boost] Futures - wait callback with a user specific parameter.

> 
> Hi,
> 
> Currently the wait callback parameter is either a promise or packaged_task 
>        template<typename F>
>        void set_wait_callback(F f);
> 
> prom.set_wait_callback(f); // will call f(&prom)
> task.set_wait_callback(f); // will call f(&task)
> 
> I would like to have a wait callback with a user specific parameter. 
>            template<typename F,typename U>
>            void set_wait_callback(F f,U* u);  // will call f(u)
> 
> prom.set_wait_callback(f, x); // will call f(x)
> 
> The use case is a class that contains a promise and wants to provide a set_wait_callback. Which parameter
will have the wait calback? A promise. But the user is not aware that my class has promise, and he will surely
want to have as parameter a pointer to my class. So the simpler is to provide a user specific parameter that
is defaulted to instance providing the wait_callback setting.
> 
> Of course my class can wrap the user function and the class instance
> 
> template <typename R>
> class X {
>        template <typename F>
>        static void wait_callback_wrapper(promise<R>* p, F f, X*x) {
>            f(x);
>        }
> 
>        template<typename F>
>        void set_wait_callback(F f) {
>            prom_.set_wait_callback(bind(wait_callback_wrapper, _1, f, this));
>        }
> };
> 
> But this implies much more resources, two binds instead of one. 
> Could this be added without to much trouble?

Anthony, I've find this on one your posts:
>> At the moment, I've specified the callbacks as taking a
>>  non-const reference to the promise or packaged_task for which they are set,
>>  but I'm open to just making them be any callable function, and leaving it up
>>  to the user to call bind() to do that.

Anthony, I think that just a callable function will be the best option.

Vicente

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