I'm not quite sure about this in the standards. Say I have three files like this:
foo.h
#include <iostream>
inline void foo();
void foo()
{
std::cout << "Foo" << std::endl;
}
foo.cpp:
#include "foo.h"
void baz();
int main()
{
baz();
foo();
}
bar.cpp
#include "foo.h"
void baz()
{
foo();
}
Now, the definition for foo will be compiled into both compilation units foo.o and bar.o. If I understand it correctly, having inlined functions will avoid linker collition. G++ compiled and links this just fine, but with clang++ 2.8 I get this error:
/tmp/cc-7RdmYP.o: In function `foo()':
bar.cpp:(.text+0x50): multiple definition of `foo()'
/tmp/cc-LW3id3.o:foo.cpp:(.text+0x50): first defined here
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
It seems that clang++ does not see void foo()
as an inlined function. It does however, work fine when I add inline to the definition as well.
Do I have to add inline to void foo()
as well here to have it be seen as an inlined function, or is this a clang++ bug?