I wonder if anybody can help with what seems to me like strange behaviour in c++
(gcc
latest version). Below is some code that compiles successfully where I would expect a compile time error due to the lack of an appropriate constructor. Can anybody explain what is going on?
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
struct ClassA {
ClassA() {cout << "hello" << endl;}
void speak() {cout << "I am class A" << endl;}
~ClassA() {cout << "goodbye" << endl;}
};
struct ClassB {
// just an empty struct
};
int main() {
ClassA myClassA(ClassB()); // trying to construct class A from an rvalue reference to class B is ok?
return 0;
}
}
If I try to call a function of class A
, I do get a compile time error:
int main() {
ClassA myClassA(ClassB());
myClassA.speak();
return 0;
}
results in:
error: request for member ‘speak’ in ‘myClassA', which is of non-class type ‘ClassA(ClassB (*)())’
Thanks!