I am sure this problem is asked a lot but I can't seem to find anything relevant. I have multiple source files in a C++ project. In typical fashion, there are multiple header files with class and function declarations and associated source files with their definitions. The problem is that when I try to use one of my classes defined in another file as a member for a class in a different file, I get compile errors even when uses the #include directive. What fixes the problem is by prototyping (is that the right word?) the class first before declaring it a member. So if ClassA is in one file and ClassB is in another and I want to use a ClassA member in ClassB I must write:
// ClassA.h
class ClassA {
public: ClassA (void); };
// ClassB.h
class ClassA; // prototype
class ClassB {
public: ClassA* ca; };
Is this normal? It doesn't matter if I use pointers or instances, I still must prototype them. I have found that I also must prototype structs and enums if they are in separate files. I can't seem to use constants declared using #define, or const across multiple files I get errors that they are undefined so I am not sure how to give them more than file scope. The same goes for typedefs. I am sure there is some easy fix to this that I am not remembering... any help is appreciated!
enumis allowed only in C++0x and only if you declare an underlying type along. – Keynslug Oct 18 '10 at 11:09enums were always ofint? But either way, what is the syntax for declaring the underlying type when I forward-declare? – Dooms101 Oct 18 '10 at 12:17