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Hello,

I see in a header that I didn't write myself the following :

class MonitorObjectString: public MonitorObject {
   // some other declarations
   friend inline bool operator==(MonitorObjectString& lhs, MonitorObjectString& rhs) { return(lhs.fVal==rhs.fVal); }

I can't understand why this method is declared as friend. I thought it would make sense if the function is defined in another place and need to access the internal member of the classe, but this is not the case here as it is inline and doesn't even need to have access to the members.

What do you think ? is the "friend" useless ?

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3 Answers

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Grammatically speaking...

The friend keyword is still needed to tell the compiler that this function is not a member of a class, EDIT: but instead a non-member function that can see the private members of the class.


However, this could have been implemented more cleanly like this:

/* friend */ inline bool operator ==(const MonitorObjectString& rhs) const
{ return fVal == rhs.fVal; }

(Of course, I'm assuming fVal is of a suitable type that can be compared without affecting its const-ness.)

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and here the friend is not needed ? – Barth Dec 19 '08 at 15:02
No, because its a member function of the same class. – Eduardo León Dec 19 '08 at 15:04
Is your proposition similar (in effect) to the original one ? Or should I expect some problem if I use your proposition instead of the original one ? Thanks a lot for your help – Barth Dec 19 '08 at 15:08
If fVal is of a type defined by the language (like int, double, etc.) there should be no problem. – Eduardo León Dec 19 '08 at 15:09
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The result is similar; but in general, non-modifying operators should prefer to be non-members because if the operator is a member function, the compiler cannot convert the left-hand type to the class type; whereas it can with a non-member function. – coppro Dec 19 '08 at 15:16
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They aren't mutually exclusive. "friend" means the non-member function can access the private members of the class. "inline" means there is no function call invocation, the body of the function is duplicated (in assembly) at every call site.

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Ok, I understand better. But as this method is member of the class, why do you need to declare it as friend ? – Barth Dec 19 '08 at 15:03
If it is a friend, its not a member of the class. – Eduardo León Dec 19 '08 at 15:04
@Barth - Eduardo is correct. If you put friend in front of the function it's standalone! not a method. That's why it requires TWO! parameters, there is no implied "this". – eduffy Dec 19 '08 at 15:49
The keyword 'inline' does not mean it is actually inlines the code. It is a "HINT" to the compiler. The compiler will ONLY inline if it makes sense to do so. – Martin York Dec 19 '08 at 17:03
but never the less, the "inline" has effects. it's not like it's useless. it will make some particular useful premises in regard to ODR. anyway, the inline is redundant here, because a function defined in a friend definition is implicitly inline – Johannes Schaub - litb Feb 7 at 6:43
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friend inline bool operator==(MonitorObjectString& lhs, MonitorObjectString& rhs) { 
    return(lhs.fVal==rhs.fVal); 
}

is called friend definition. It will define the function as a non-member function of the namespace surrounding the class it appears in. Actually, the inline there is redundant: It's implicitly declared inline if it's a friend definition. Some pros and cons of it:

  • It makes the operator not visible to normal lookup. The only way you can call it is using argument depending look-up. This will keep the namespace free of lots of operator declarations visible normally. Note that this will also disable ability of calling it using implicit conversions to MonitorObjectString (because if both argument types do not match at the time of looking for candidates to be called, argument dependent look-up won't find the function).
  • The lookup for names starts in the scope of the class the friend definition appears in. This means that no long type-names or other names are needed to be written out. Just refer them as you would in a normal member function of the class.
  • As it is a friend, the function sees the internals of MonitorObjectString. But that's neither good nor bad. It depends on the situation. For example if there are functions getFVal() making the function friend is pretty pointless. Could use getFVal as-well then.

I used to like this friend definition style of operators, because they have direct access to class members, and appear within the class definition - so i could have "everything with one sight". Recently, however, i came to the conclusion that it's not always a good idea. If you can (and you should) implement the operator purely using public member functions of the class, you should make it a non-friend (and non-member) operator, defined in the same namespace of the class. It makes sure that if you change some implementation - but keep the interface of the class the same - the operator will still work and you have less cascading changes, because you know it can't access implementation details.

However, i prefer this style over writing member operators, because operator functions at namespace scope have the added features of being symmetric with their arguments: They don't treat the left side special, because both sides are just normal arguments and not object arguments that are bound to *this. If either the left or the right side is of the type of your class, the other side can be implicitly converted - disregarding of whether it's left or right. For functions that are also defined without the friend definition syntax (traditionally, at namespace scope), you will have the feature of selectively including headers that make those operators available or not.

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