On Thursday, 19 March 2020 at 06:34:40 UTC, Alex wrote:
A non-static member method can use the context of the struct
where it is defined in. E.g. it could alter a member variable.
This context has to be constructed at run time (and there could
be many instances of the context) and does not exist in compile
time. Therefore the difference to the static method.
I am not try to get the context, I just need the function address
which is const and should able to get at compile time.
On Thursday, 19 March 2020 at 09:13:42 UTC, Boris Carvajal wrote:
On Thursday, 19 March 2020 at 04:30:32 UTC, Calvin P wrote:
You can assemble a delegate with an struct pointer or class
reference and a function member pointer.
Sorry for duplicate thread.
The last time I submit my question on web, it keep get blocked. I
thought it was not submitted successfully, so I submit from draft
again.