I am dealing with following problem. To be formal I am using VS2010 Ultimate and I try to write an windows forms application, but I get specified error:
1>f:\baza danych\baza\baza\Form5.h(475): error C2664: 'Bazadanych::Dodaj1' : cannot convert parameter 1 from 'Car' to 'Car'
1> Cannot copy construct class 'Car' due to ambiguous copy constructors or no available copy constructor
and here are Car.h where I have declaration of this class
public ref class Car
{
public:
String^ category;
String^ model;
String^ rocznik;
String^ cena;
Car(){};
Car(String^ ,String^ ,String^ );
void edytuj(String^ ,String^ ,String^ );
String^ getmodel(){return this->model;};
String^ getrocznik(){return this->rocznik;};
String^ getcena(){return this->cena;};
virtual String^ getcat()
{
this->category="To rent";
return this->category;
};`
}
Definition:
Car::Car(String^ model1,String^ rocznik1,String^ cena1)
{
this->model=model1;
this->rocznik=rocznik1;
this->cena=cena1;
};
void Car::edytuj(String^ model1,String^ rocznik1,String^ cena1)
{
this->model=model1;
this->rocznik=rocznik1;
this->cena=cena1;
};
Declaration of class where method mentioned in error is:
public ref class Bazadanych
{
public:
cliext::list<Car^> Bazatorent;
cliext::list<Rented^> Bazarented;
cliext::list<Unavaible^> Bazaunavaible;
cliext::list<Car^>::iterator it1;
cliext::list<Rented^>::iterator it2;
cliext::list<Unavaible^>::iterator it3;
Bazadanych()
{
it1=Bazatorent.begin();
it2=Bazarented.begin();
it3=Bazaunavaible.begin();
};
bool Empty();
void Dodaj1(Car);
void Dodaj2(Rented);
void Dodaj3(Unavaible);
void Usun1(Car);
void Usun2(Rented);
void Usun3(Unavaible);
void Czysc();
};
and definition:
void Bazadanych::Dodaj1(Car Element)
{
this->Bazatorent.push_back(Element);
};
I have definitions and declarations in separatly .h and .cpp files. For other methods "Dodaj" and "Usun" I have exactly the same problems. If it could help the class Car is base class for class Rented and Unavaible. I am pretty new in C++/CLI, so I will be very grateful if someone could help me.
I find the error message strange given that it's a managed class. But you can solve it by changing the method's signature to:
void Bazadanych::Dodaj1(Car^ Element) // notice the "^"
Same for the other similar methods.
I'm guessing that without the hat (^), the compiler treats the variable as a regular C++ class, and therefore requires a copy constructor for it, even though managed classes don't even have copy constructors (you can write them but they're never called implicitly like for regular C++ classes).
EDIT: About the error in your comment: Instead of instantiating the class like this:
Car car;
Do it like this:
Car^ car = gcnew Car();