Without a class definition somewhere earlier, you can't use any class members, nor can you create any instances, but you can
use T* and T& types,
use T for formal return type and parameter declarations (yes even by value),
use T as a template parameter,
and possibly more, but the above is what occurred to me immediately.
So if that's all you need, then you're set to go with the forward-declarations.
However, all that the forward declaring buys you in the sketched situation is added work, maintaining the same code in two places, so it's difficult to see the point of it…
Oh, I just remembered, there is a particularly nasty Undefined Behavior associated with forward-declared incomplete types, namely using delete p where p is a pointer to incomplete type. This requires the destructor to be trivial. If the compiler is good then it warns, but don't count on it.
In summary, I would just place main at the very end of that code, where it belongs, avoiding all the problems.
mainat the bottom and ignore the issue... at any rate the answer is that forward declarations of classes have limited use. – David Rodríguez - dribeas Jan 15 at 19:17