I'm pretty sure I read on an authoritative source somewhere (I believe it was on the WG21 pages) that C++03 was not a technical corrigendum of C++98 but that it was a new release of the C++ Standard.

But nontheless I see only -std=c++98 switch in GCC and others compilers and Alf P Steinbach made a few comments hinting at that it may indeed be a TC of C++98.

So when I'm writing about "C++03", does it suffice mentioning C++98? As a related question, is it even wrong to use the term "C++03"? Because I think if it is really C++98 TC1, then it seems to me it cannot be called C++03. Just as I've never seen someone write C07 for the C99TC3 release.

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Why does this matter in practice? – Mat Nov 27 '11 at 13:18
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@Mat i want to write correct text. – Johannes Schaub - litb Nov 27 '11 at 13:23
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ISO/IEC 14882:2003 is the second edition of ISO/IEC 14882, the previous one being 14882:1998. Both are published, ANSI approved, standards. According to 2003 forward: "This second edition cancels and replaces the first edition ...". – Mat Nov 27 '11 at 13:32
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@Mat: Why does it matter whether it matters in practice? – Lightness Races in Orbit Nov 27 '11 at 19:40
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Yes and no.

C++03 (ISO C++14882:2003) is a standard in its own right, and it is also "just" TC1 because it is only C++98 amended with a set of corrections.

You can say that C++03 is what C++98 was intended to be, the actual wording of C++98 revised to make it say what it was meant to say.

In the committee's own words:

“The first edition of ISO/IEC 14882 was published in 1998. A technical corrigendum was approved in 2003, . and the standard was published again as the 2003 edition.”

The extraneous period in there is just quoted literally.

In the words of Wikipedia (which is not an authority, but should be fixed if it’s wrong):

“For some years after the official release of the standard, the committee processed defect reports, and published a corrected version of the C++ standard, ISO/IEC 14882:2003, in 2003.”

One might argue, however, that value initialization was a new thing and not just a correction. And one might argue that the Technical Corrigendum itself consisted only of the corrections, while the standard amended with those corrections is a different thing, a new standard. Both of these points view make sense contextually, as I see it, although not as absolute context-independent statements.

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So the committee says that they approved it as TC but the iso made a non-TC new standard out of it? – Johannes Schaub - litb Nov 27 '11 at 16:58
@Johannes: no, they do not say "non-TC". C++03 is, in the words of the back cover of the dead tree version, "the complete, current International C++ Standard incorporating Technical Corrigendum 1 / This is technically BS ISO/IEC 14882:2003 (Second Edition) as approved by all national standards bodies (such as ANSI). It is the ONLY available bound version of the standard." I'm not sure what the BS in there means, though. – Cheers and hth. - Alf Nov 27 '11 at 17:19
@AlfP.Steinbach: British Standard. The BSi where the only standards body to publish a bound dead tree edition AFAIK. – Charles Bailey Nov 27 '11 at 20:54
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It is a whole new Standard. I believe that it began as just a TC, which is why the confusion occurs, and it certainly is effectively just a bugfix release. However, there were changes and it is worth knowing whether you're talking about 98 or 03.

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"However, there were changes and it is worth knowing whether you're talking about 98 or 03.": such as? – akappa Nov 27 '11 at 13:34
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@akappa: std::vector only required it's elements be contiguous starting in 03, for example. I disagree it matters much though. Anyone who cares about what the behavior of C++98 was will already be in a position to know they ought to specify that. Someone just asking about "C++" is probably looking for a practical answer, and so wants to know the behavior of the current standard, and what their compiler will support. Since we are now on C++11, C++98 is effectively irrelevant for such questions. – GManNickG Nov 27 '11 at 23:23
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