Every now and again I get surprised by C++. TIL that if you want to write:
auto l = [] { std::cout << "I like goats\n"; }; l(); l = [] { std::cout << "I like boats\n"; }; l();then it doesn't work: the compiler complains
error: no match for ??operator=?? (operand types are ??main()::You're trying to overwrite the lambda, and you can't. You want "l" to be a pointer. You can have this if you write?? and ??void (*)()??)
void(*l)(void) = [] { std::cout << "I like goats\n"; };but that's tedious: you have to remember the deeply confusing C function-pointer syntax; and when you're gaily tossing off complex lambda's in the middle of code, it's worse. But it turns out that you can write
auto l = +[] { std::cout << "I like goats\n"; };and the "+" magically converts the lambda into a pointer-to. This stackoverflow post "explains" it. Fiddling around with std::function probably works too.
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