I am trying to create my own enum-based error category and want my enum with error codes to be defined inside some namespace. Much to my surprise this prevents the automatic conversion from values of my enum into std::error_code
(such conversion works if the enum is defined in the global namespace).
#include <system_error>
namespace NS { enum class X {a,b,c}; }
using NS::X;
class X_category : public std::error_category
{
public:
virtual const char *name() const noexcept override { return "X"; }
virtual std::string message(int ev) const override { return ""; }
};
inline const std::error_category& X_category()
{
static class X_category c; return c;
}
template<> struct std::is_error_code_enum<X> : public std::true_type{};
inline std::error_code make_error_code(X result)
{
return std::error_code(static_cast<int>(result), X_category());
}
int main()
{
std::error_code e = X::a; // does not work !!
}
Am I missing something in my code above (related to overloading resolution rules perhaps) to make it work? Or do the enums for std::is_error_code_enum<>
can only be defined inside a global namespace??
EDIT. My compiler (MSVC2013) does not complain about it but it seems the specialization of std::is_error_code_enum<> must be done inside std namespace. Also I added noexcept keyword on name() method to make the code even more C++11 compliant (MSVC2013 won't understand noexcept, but MSVC2015 will).
EDIT2. According to C++11 14.7.3.2 [temp.expl.spec]:
An explicit specialization shall be declared in a namespace enclosing the specialized template.
So it is not necessary to put specialization of std::is_error_code_enum<> inside an std namespace. MSVC compiles it correctly but GCC complains which is actually a bug in GCC since GCC acts by old C++03 rules which were more restrictive.
noexcept
if your compiler supports it) and I have no idea what is MCVE you are asking me to post.