I took the following code from the examples page on Asio
class tcp_connection : public boost::enable_shared_from_this<tcp_connection>
{
public:
typedef boost::shared_ptr<tcp_connection> pointer;
static pointer create(boost::asio::io_service& io_service)
{
return pointer(new tcp_connection(io_service));
}
tcp::socket& socket()
{
return socket_;
}
void start()
{
message_ = make_daytime_string();
boost::asio::async_write(socket_, boost::asio::buffer(message_),
boost::bind(&tcp_connection::handle_write, shared_from_this(),
boost::asio::placeholders::error,
boost::asio::placeholders::bytes_transferred));
}
private:
tcp_connection(boost::asio::io_service& io_service)
: socket_(io_service)
{
}
void handle_write(const boost::system::error_code& /*error*/,
size_t /*bytes_transferred*/)
{
}
tcp::socket socket_;
std::string message_;
};
I'm relatively new to C++ (from a C# background), and from what I understand, most people would split this into header and source files (declaration/implementation, respectively). Is there any reason I can't just leave it in the header file if I'm going to use it across many source files? If so, are there any tools that will automatically convert it to declaration/implementation for me? Can someone show me what this would look like split into header/source file for an example (or just part of it, anyway)? I get confused around weird stuff like thistypedef boost::shared_ptr<tcp_connection> pointer; Do I include this in the header or the source? Same with tcp::socket& socket()
I've read many tutorials, but this has always been something that has confused me about C++.