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Forgive me if this has been answered already, as I couldn't find it...

Basically I have an object that needs to take a variadic argument list in it's constructor and store the arguments in a vector. How do I initialize a vector from a the arguments of a variadic constructor?

class GenericNode {
public:
    GenericNode(GenericNode*... inputs) {
            /* Something like... */
        // inputs_.push_back(inputs)...;
}
private:
    std::vector<GenericNode*> inputs_;
};
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The best thing would be to use an initializer list

#include <initializer_list>
#include <vector>
class GenericNode {
public:
    GenericNode(std::initializer_list<GenericNode*> inputs) 
        :inputs_(inputs) {} //well that's easy
private:
    std::vector<GenericNode*> inputs_;
};
int main() {
    GenericNode* ptr;
    GenericNode node{ptr, ptr, ptr, ptr};
} //compilation at http://stacked-crooked.com/view?id=88ebac6a4490915fc4bc608765ba2b6c

The closest to what you already have, using C++11 is to use the vector's initializer_list:

    template<class ...Ts>
    GenericNode(Ts... inputs) 
        :inputs_{inputs...} {} //well that's easy too
    //compilation at http://stacked-crooked.com/view?id=2f7514b33401c51d33677bbff358f8ae

And here's a C++11 version with no initializer_lists at all. It's ugly, and complicated, and requires features missing from many compilers. Use the initializer list

template<class T>
using Alias = T;

class GenericNode {
public:
    template<class ...Ts>
    GenericNode(Ts... inputs) { //SFINAE might be appropriate
         using ptr = GenericNode*;
         Alias<char[]>{( //first part of magic unpacker
             inputs_.push_back(ptr(inputs))
             ,'0')...,'0'}; //second part of magic unpacker
    }
private:
    std::vector<GenericNode*> inputs_;
};
int main() {
    GenericNode* ptr;
    GenericNode node(ptr, ptr, ptr, ptr);
} //compilation at http://stacked-crooked.com/view?id=57c533692166fb222adf5f837891e1f9
//thanks to R. Martinho Fernandes for helping me get it to compile

Unrelated to everything, I don't know if those are owning pointers or not. If they are, use std::unique_ptr instead.


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