C++ Reflection Library
RTTR stands for Run Time Type Reflection. It describes the ability of a computer program to introspect and modify an object at runtime. It is also the name of the library itself, which is written in C++ and released as open source library. You can find more information on: www.rttr.org
#include <rttr/registration>
using namespace rttr;
struct MyStruct { MyStruct() {}; void func(double) {}; int data; };
RTTR_REGISTRATION
{
registration::class_<MyStruct>("MyStruct")
.constructor<>()
.property("data", &MyStruct::data)
.method("func", &MyStruct::func);
}
type t = type::get<MyStruct>();
for (auto& prop : t.get_properties())
std::cout << "name: " << prop.get_name();
for (auto& meth : t.get_methods())
std::cout << "name: " << meth.get_name();
type t = type::get_by_name("MyStruct");
variant var = t.create(); // will invoke the previously registered ctor
constructor ctor = t.get_constructor(); // 2nd way with the constructor class
var = ctor.invoke();
std::cout << var.get_type().get_name(); // prints 'MyStruct'
MyStruct obj;
property prop = type::get(obj).get_property("data");
prop.set_value(obj, 23);
variant var_prop = prop.get_value(obj);
std::cout << var_prop.to_int(); // prints '23'
MyStruct obj;
method meth = type::get(obj).get_method("func");
meth.invoke(obj, 42.0);
variant var = type::get(obj).create();
meth.invoke(var, 42.0);
- reflect constructors, methods, data member or enums
- classes; with single-, multiple- and virtual-inheritance
- constructors (arbitrary argument count)
- methods (virtual, abstract, overloaded, arbitrary argument count)
- arrays (incl. raw-arrays; arbitrary dimension count)
- ability to invoke properties and methods of classes from any arbitrary class level
- no header pollution; the reflection information is created in the cpp file to minimize compile time when modifying the data
- working with custom types without the need of having the declaration of the type available at compile time (useful for plugins)
- possibility to add additional metadata to all reflection objects
- possibility to add default arguments to methods or constructors
- adjust registration behaviour through policies
- minimal macro usage
- no additional 3rd party dependencies are needed
- no rtti required; contains a faster and across shared libraries working replacement
- no exceptions (this feature come with cost and is also regularly disabled on consoles)
- no external compiler or tool needed, only standard ISO C++11
Tested and compiled with:
- Microsoft Visual Studio 2013, 2015 & 2017
- GCC 4.8.1
- Clang 3.7
- MinGW 4.8.2
RTTR is released under the terms of the MIT license, so it is free to use in your free or commercial projects.
The installation guide can be found here.
Take a look at the documentation or start with the tutorial.