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I am trying to port a project in a new Linux system with newer g++ version. While compiling I am getting the following:

error: extra qualification 'Customer::' on member 'getCustomer'

Inside a class definition, I am prefixing getCustomer() with Customer::.

If I remove the Customer:: my code works, however the code has a lot of entries prefixed with class names and scope operator. Is there a way, eg a compiler directive, that helps eliminating this error?

From my shell gcc version 4.4.2 20091027 (Red Hat 4.4.2-7) (GCC)

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    This is an error, not a warning, so there must be something actually wrong with your code (which we cannot check btw). No flag can change that fact.
    – bitmask
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:04
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    I don't understand the down vote and close request. This is part of production code on a - not that old - G++ system. Are we discussing programming issues here?
    – cateof
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:07
  • @bitmask, this was NOT an error in earlier versions and I asked if there is backwards compatibility in the compiler
    – cateof
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:08
  • I didn't down- or close-vote, but I assume somebody did because of the relative vagueness of the question that makes it hard to reproduce your problem.
    – bitmask
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:12
  • @bitmask, my first comment was not for you.
    – cateof
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:14

2 Answers 2

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Inside a class definition, I am prefixing getCustomer() with Customer::.

I'm assuming you mean:

class Customer {
    Customer *Customer::getCustomer() { ... }
};

Don't. There's no need since you're already in the class definition, and I don't think the C++ standard even allows this (I'm surprised older G++ did?).

It seems there's no -std flag (in GCC 4.4.5) that permits this.

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  • Yes your code is close to our code. Sorry for not posting this at the question. Do you mean that -std is needed?
    – cateof
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:09
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    No, I'm saying that -std doesn't seem to "fix" this, and that really, your code is broken.
    – Fred Foo
    Mar 7, 2012 at 15:10
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    G++ tightens up how closely it follows the standard with each version, so many things that are illegal used to be accepted. Mar 7, 2012 at 15:13
  • @IgnacioVazquez-Abrams: and I am personally thankful for that! Mar 7, 2012 at 15:27
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Such code can be compiled with -fpermissive. (GCC 4.9.2, not clang 3.6.0)

I tested full program based on larsmans's interpretation:

#include <cstdio>
class Customer {
    public: Customer *Customer::getCustomer() { return this; }
};
int main()
{
    std:printf("%p\n", Customer().getCustomer());
}

It did not compile with g++ test.cpp, but it did compile (with a warning) with g++ test.cpp -fpermissive. Even g++ test.cpp -fpermissive -ansi and g++ test.cpp -fpermissive -std=c++11 work.

With -w you do not get the warning, but maybe it is not always the best idea: you may want to get informed when something is strange.

clang++ test.cpp -fpermissive gives an error, although clang seems to recognize parameter -fpermissive. Maybe somebody knows a way to make it accept such code.

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