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January 19, 2007 Reference to implementation of interface. | ||||
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Hello, I am in need of a way to reference the class implementing an interface from within the interface's definition. Example: interface A { static A constA; } Here the type "A" within "static A constA" is short for any class implementing the interface "A". But I'd prefer to have some way to reference the class, which is implementing this interface -- and not "any class implementing A". The above definition of the interface "A" allows to write class B: A { static B constA; } which is just what I want. However, it also allows class C: A { static B constA; } which I would like to forbid. The "B" within the "static B constA" is the problem. I would like to force it to "C" (the class currently implementing the interface "A") within the definition of the interface "A". Can this be modelled with D? Kind regards, Christian Aistleitner |
January 19, 2007 Re: Reference to implementation of interface. | ||||
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Posted in reply to Christian Aistleitner | Christian Aistleitner wrote: > Hello, > > I am in need of a way to reference the class implementing an interface from within the interface's definition. Offhand, I'd say the best way to do that is with a templated base-class or interface. For example: interface Bar(T){ static T baz; // in the class below, 'baz' will by of type 'Foo' } class Foo: Bar!(Foo){ } -- - EricAnderton at yahoo |
January 20, 2007 Re: Reference to implementation of interface. | ||||
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Posted in reply to Pragma | Hello, On Fri, 19 Jan 2007 22:41:55 +0100, Pragma <ericanderton@yahoo.removeme.com> wrote: > Christian Aistleitner wrote: >> Hello, >> I am in need of a way to reference the class implementing an interface from within the interface's definition. > > Offhand, I'd say the best way to do that is with a templated base-class or interface. For example: > > interface Bar(T){ > static T baz; // in the class below, 'baz' will by of type 'Foo' > } > > class Foo: Bar!(Foo){ > } although I see that your code allows to model the problem, its actually artificial and rather cumbersome to pass the implementing class as a parameter, wherever I'd need such an operator. And the knowledge that the parameter Foo has to match the class' name is implicit by the design and cannot be checked by the compiler. Kind regards, Christian |
January 22, 2007 Re: Reference to implementation of interface. | ||||
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Posted in reply to Christian Aistleitner | Christian Aistleitner wrote: > Hello, > > On Fri, 19 Jan 2007 22:41:55 +0100, Pragma <ericanderton@yahoo.removeme.com> wrote: > >> Christian Aistleitner wrote: >>> Hello, >>> I am in need of a way to reference the class implementing an interface from within the interface's definition. >> >> Offhand, I'd say the best way to do that is with a templated base-class or interface. For example: >> >> interface Bar(T){ >> static T baz; // in the class below, 'baz' will by of type 'Foo' >> } >> >> class Foo: Bar!(Foo){ >> } > > although I see that your code allows to model the problem, its actually artificial and rather cumbersome to pass the implementing class as a parameter, wherever I'd need such an operator. > And the knowledge that the parameter Foo has to match the class' name is implicit by the design and cannot be checked by the compiler. I agree, there's a certain lack of type protection to the whole thing, and it is a little cumbersome. It can be improved by narrowing what T can be: private interface IBar{} interface Bar(T: _Bar) : IBar{ } ...which ensures that any T must also be castable to type "IBar" (and hence "Bar" provided nothing else uses "IBar"). That's at least some protection from a developer using a bogus argument. However, this is pretty much the only way to solve this particular problem. Simply put: there is no way an interface (or a class for that matter) can deduce it's implementing type (or descendant) at compile time without an explicit hint like this. The only construct that D offers for type deduction at compile time, aside from templates and "auto", is "typeof(this)". However, that only gives you the enclosing type - so you could only get 'Bar' within 'Bar' and 'Foo' within 'Foo'. -- - EricAnderton at yahoo |
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