Here's a random, incomplete illustration:
class Foo; // (incomplete forward) class declaration
class Foo { // class definition
int a; // member declaration + definition
int b(int, int); // member function declaration
static int c; // static member declaration
};
int Foo::b(int a, int b) { return a+b; } // member function definition
int Foo::c; // static member defintion
int bar(int); // free function declaration
int main() { // free function declaration + definition
int q; // declaration + definition
q = bar(0);
return q;
}
int bar(int a) { return 2 * a; } // free function definition
Perhaps the "static member definition" is unique in the sense that it provided an actual object instance (i.e. allocation plus construction) for an object that has been declared elsewhere. This is only comparable to a pure-extern declaration:
extern int N; // declaration only, no definition
Not to be confused with a declaration+definition with external visibility:
extern const int M = 11; // declaration and definition
[]
, map grows automatically.std::map<T,T>
should suffice in most of the cases. If you thinking in terms of raw pointers, please think over.map<int,int> *infoMap;
is a declaration, but in this case it is also a definition.