I have a struct where I use a number of "invariant(){enforce( .... blah, blah ...);}"
statements in the struct body to enforce certain conditions on a struct member. Since these "invariants" are only called when struct member functions are exercised, must I overload each individual operation that may lead to a violation? Or, is there any way to funnel all such operations, so my invariants are exercised? ----------------------- For example, struct member "x" is an integer slice, I can account for *some of* the operations that affect the slice slice via (such as the append operator):
// overloaded to activate enforcements void opOpAssign(string op)(int a){mixin("this.x"~op~"= a;");} void opOpAssign(string op)(int[] a){mixin("this.x"~op~"= a;");}
(since these are picked up as member function, they can exercise my "invariant"). ---------------------------- But there are a number of slicing operation that I also need to be careful of. I must disallow any operation that changes the length of my slice, or the pointer associated with my slice. How should I account for all combinations of operations that might change size of slice member? Any elegant solutions here? Best Regards, James