In file main.cpp...

#include "pqueue.h"

struct nodeT;

struct coordT {
    double x, y;
};

struct arcT {
    nodeT *start, *end;
    double weight;
};

int arcComp(arcT *arg0, arcT *arg1){
    if(arg0->weight == arg1->weight)
        return 0;
    else if(arg0->weight > arg1->weight)
        return 1;
    return -1;
}

struct nodeT {
    coordT* coordinates;
    PQueue<arcT *> outgoing_arcs(arcComp); // error on this line
};

In file pqueue.h ...

#ifndef _pqueue_h
#define _pqueue_h

template <typename ElemType>
class PQueue 
{
private:
    typedef int (*CallbackFunc)(ElemType, ElemType);
    CallbackFunc CmpFunc;

public:
    PQueue(CallbackFunc Cmp);
    ~PQueue();  
};

#include "pqueue.cpp"
#endif

In file pqueue.cpp

#include "pqueue.h"

template <typename ElemType>
PQueue<ElemType>::PQueue(CallbackFunc Cmp = OperatorCmp)
{
    CmpFunc = Cmp;
}

template<typename ElemType>
PQueue<ElemType>::~PQueue()
{
}

error C2061: syntax error : identifier 'arcComp'

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54% accept rate
so..........? the compiler is telling you what is wrong, it doesn't understand this line: PQueue<arcT *> outgoing_arcs(arcComp); - what's the question? – Nim Oct 14 '11 at 14:54
The question is "why" ? Why doesn't the compiler understand that line? – SegFault Oct 14 '11 at 14:55
Why are you including pqueue.cpp? – MGZero Oct 14 '11 at 14:56
1  
Is that line supposed to define a member function or a variable, coz the compiler is seeing it as the first. – UncleBens Oct 14 '11 at 14:56
1  
@SegFault - well the answer depends on what you are trying to do - clearly the compiler has not understood it - are you declaring a data member or member function? If former - see Konrad's answer, if latter, you've not declared it correctly... – Nim Oct 14 '11 at 14:57
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1 Answer

up vote 9 down vote accepted

The syntax is simply invalid, you cannot initialise members in-place; use a constructor.

struct nodeT {
    coordT* coordinates;
    PQueue<arcT *> outgoing_arcs;

    nodeT() : ougoing_arcs(arcComp) { }
};

Apart from that you cannot (usually) define templates in cpp files, you must put the complete definition inside the header file. Granted, you are #includeing the cpp file rather than treating it as a separate compilation unit but that’s still bad, if only because it will trip up programmers’ expectations and automated build tools.

As a final side-note, your code is violating every single C++ naming convention I have ever encountered.

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1  
" you cannot (usually) define templates in cpp files", I am seperating interface from implementation by doing so, which I guess is good thing – SegFault Oct 14 '11 at 15:02
@SegFault: You might try ".ipp" instead of ".cpp": stackoverflow.com/questions/543507/… – Bill Oct 14 '11 at 15:04
1  
@SegFault It is. But then don’t call the implementation file pqueue.cpp. .cpp is exclusively reserved to correspond to compilation units! Either use the extension .ipp which has become somewhat of a convention, or use something unambiguous as .impl.hpp or .impl.h or similar. – Konrad Rudolph Oct 14 '11 at 15:05
can you please explain what is "nodeT() : ougoing_arcs(arcComp) { }" actually doing? – SegFault Oct 14 '11 at 15:05
1  
@SegFault There’s almost no difference between class and struct in C++. The only difference that by default everything in a struct is public, whereas in a class it’s private. That’s it. – Konrad Rudolph Oct 14 '11 at 15:16
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