This is not really a "language lawyer" question since there is no difference between struct
and class
in this context. You can feel assured that it makes absolutely no difference whether std::atomic<T>
is a struct or a class. It is more of a "C++ history" question.
N2145 says
The proposal defines the types as POD structs and the core functions on pointers to those structs, so that types and core functions are usable from both C and C++. That is, a header included from both C and C++ can declare a variable of an atomic type and provide inline functions that operate on them. The proposal additionally provides member operators so that C++ programmers may use a more concise syntax.
Further down in the paper you can see that it seems to have been intended for implementations to be able to provide a single header that would declare member functions only in C++ mode (since structs cannot have member functions in C):
typedef struct atomic_bool
{
#ifdef __cplusplus
bool lock_free() volatile;
bool operator =( bool __v__ ) volatile;
operator bool() volatile;
bool swap( bool __v__ ) volatile;
bool compare_swap( bool * __r__, bool __v__ ) volatile;
#endif
bool __f__;
} atomic_bool;
I don't know whether implementations actually use such an approach. It is not necessary for them to do so. So it isn't necessary for C++ to define std::atomic_bool
and so on as structs.
A later revision, N2393, introduced the class template std::atomic
. It doesn't explain why std::atomic<T>
should be a struct rather than a class; I guess it was just for consistency.
Still later came a revision that actually got accepted into C++11.
As an aside, in C++23 it will finally be possible to include the C header stdatomic.h
in C++. See P0943.
struct
andclass
is? There is basically no difference; so, why do you care if it is astruct
or aclass
?{
in one bit of example code in the standard, and none before a different{
?" The two terms, when defining a class, are next to interchangable as makes no difference... I mean, I could make up a story that is plausible ("it indicates the data should be as close to POD as reasonable"), or we could maybe track down the person who did it (probably in a different library, from where it was imported to the standard), but ... why should anybody care?boost
and found thatboost::atomic
is defined asclass
. So version about importing is not relevant I think. Question marked withlanguage-lawyer
often imply that many of c++ programmers do not care about it. But I would still like to know the answer. Let it even be only a plausible story.