5

I am getting this compiler error

error: 'RawLog' does not name a type

Here is the relevant code:

//DataAudit.h
#ifndef DATAAUDIT_H
#define DATAAUDIT_H

class RawLog;

class DataAudit
{
...
private:
    RawLog* _createNewRawLog(); // This is the line indicated with the error
};

#endif // DATAAUDIT_H

Usually a forward declaration resolves this kind of error. This answer indicates that a circular header inclusion may cause this. But doesn't the use of the #ifndef and #define statements prevent circular header inclusion?

Is there another reason I might see this error?

What are some avenues of approach I could use to further deduce the nature of this error?

Update: This is rather odd. I have a Globals.h file, and if I define a new enum in Globals.h, the error appears. Then if I comment out the enum, the error goes away. This leads me to think that the circular dependency has existed for a while, and adding the enum somehow re-orders the compilation units, thus exposing the dependency that wasn't there before?

11
  • Are you sure that this is exactly where the problem is, and you have given us a complete and reproducible example? If so, what compiler, since g++ 4.6.3 compiles it fine [once I added the missing semicolon and removed the ...]. Aug 2, 2013 at 22:20
  • You also forgot a ; at the end of DataAudit. Depending on how these are included it could cause problems.
    – Borgleader
    Aug 2, 2013 at 22:22
  • @Borgleader Ah, my bad. The semicolon is there in the original code.
    – Cory Klein
    Aug 2, 2013 at 22:23
  • 1
    @MatsPetersson That is NOT a complete and reproducible sample. I don't think the error exists in this file, I must be making a mistake somewhere else. I'm working right now on cutting down the code to just what is reproducible, but it's a rather large application and I was hoping SO had other ideas on places to look to resolve the error. Is just cutting down the code until the error disappears the only solution? I'm also trying to just backout recent code until the problem goes away... ugh.
    – Cory Klein
    Aug 2, 2013 at 22:25
  • @UchiaItachi DataAudit.cpp is 131 lines long... I'm not sure what would be the relevant parts for this post?
    – Cory Klein
    Aug 2, 2013 at 22:26

2 Answers 2

3

The #ifndef header guard doesn't prevent circular dependencies. It just prevents multiple inclusions of the same header in a single file.

Looks like a circular dependency to me. This means you #include a header in DataAudit.h that #includes DataAudit.h either directly or indirectly.

3

In the end, I am not sure I understand completely why the error occurred, but this is what I did to resolve it, and some other related information. Maybe this will help others that come across this question.

  1. For each header file in my project
    1. For each #include "..." in the header
      1. If there are no references to the class in the #include, remove it.
      2. If there are only pointers to the class defined in the #include, then replace it with a class ... forward declaration.
      3. If there is a member instance of the class defined in #include and it makes sense to use a pointer and allocate the member on the heap, then change the member to a pointer, and replace the #include with a class .... forward declaration.
  2. Go through my Globals.h and move anything that can be moved out of it to more localized and specific header files.
    1. Specifically, remove an enum that was defined is Globals.h, and place it in a more localized header file.

After doing all this I was able to make the error go away. Strangely enough, the enum in Globals.h seemed to be a catalyst for the error. Whenever I removed it from Globals.h, the error would go away. I don't see how this enum could cause the error, so I think it indirectly led to the error somehow. I still wasn't able to figure out exactly how or why, but it has helped me for this guideline when coding in C++:

Don't put anything in a header file unless it needs to be there. Don't place anything in a Globals.h that can be placed in a more localized file. Basically, do all you can to reduce the amount of code that is included through the #include directives.

1
  • To note, 1.1.3 above may be a controversial design decision, but when you are getting into your 4th hour of debugging a similar error and it solves your problem with only minor design change, it may be worth it.
    – Cory Klein
    Aug 5, 2013 at 16:15

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