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From: David Abrahams (dave_at_[hidden])
Date: 2002-11-17 08:59:07
"Peter Dimov" <pdimov_at_[hidden]> writes:
> From: "David Abrahams" <dave_at_[hidden]>
>> In Boost.Python, I am going to start using custom deleters to enable
>> me to produce shared_ptr<T> from any Python object which contains a T,
>> while keeping the Python object alive. I can't believe I didn't think
>> of this earlier, and I want to thank Peter Dimov for putting me onto
>> the idea.
>>
>> Each such shared_ptr<T> contains a pointer to the owning Python
>> object, whose identity is associated with that of the T object it
>> contains. When these shared_ptrs are converted back to Python, I
>> currently have to build a new Python object around a copy of the
>> shared_ptr<T>, so that now there are two Python objects using the same
>> C++ object's "guts". It would be very useful if I could introspect
>> about the deleter, and find out that it was using my custom deleter,
>> extract the Python object pointer, and simply return that instead of
>> building a new Python object.
>>
>> Looking at the code, I can see a few ways to hack that functionality
>> in, but I wonder if we should think about making it part of the public
>> interface? After all, the deleter is part of the public interface for
>> shared_ptr creation...
>
> shared_ptr introspection is something that I've been considering lately. In
> particular:
>
> void const * shared_ptr::get_original_pointer() const;
> std::type_info const & shared_ptr::get_element_type_info() const;
>
> I haven't encountered a need to inspect the deleter yet... what interface
> are you suggesting?
How about:
// attempt to extract a deleter of type D
D* d = boost::get_deleter<D>(p);
if (d)
{
// that was the deleter type used.
}
??
-- David Abrahams dave_at_[hidden] * http://www.boost-consulting.com Boost support, enhancements, training, and commercial distribution
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