49

Looking at the enum documentation, there was one thing that I noticed:

enum-key - one of enum, enum class(since C++11), or enum struct(since C++11)

enum and enum class, sure, but what is a enum struct?

The docs seem to say that enum class and enum struct are exactly the same:

[...] scoped enumeration (declared with the enum-key enum class or enum struct)


  • enum struct|class name { enumerator = constexpr , enumerator = constexpr , ... }
  • [...]

Are they really exactly the same? Or are there any differences that I missed? What is the point (if they are the same) to have 2 different syntax for the same thing?

1
  • What is the point of not including both syntax? It makes sense to just have both given that struct and class are usually equivalent (apart from public/private) in c++. Jul 22, 2016 at 23:34

2 Answers 2

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enum class and enum struct are the same (emphasis mine).

7.2 Enumeration declarations
...
2 .... The enum-keys enum class and enum struct are semantically equivalent; an enumeration type declared with one of these is a scoped enumeration, and its enumerators are scoped enumerators.

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enum class, sure, but what is a enum struct?

Same as enum class.

Are they really exactly the same?

Yes. The documentation is correct.

Or are there any differences that I missed?

No. There are no differences.

What is the point (if they are the same) to have 2 different syntax for the same thing?

I haven't found any written rationalization for the decision. There isn't any in the standard nor the proposal. One might guess that it is some sort of counterpart to class vs struct class-keys. This is an opposite decision than was made when template<class T> syntax was specified, where struct is not allowed.

3
  • 3
    But template<typename T> is allowed, and is also equivalent to template<class T>! The standard is quite confusing on these 2 points, isn't it?
    – ZeeByeZon
    Mar 4, 2019 at 15:21
  • 3
    @ZeeByeZon: No. class and struct being near synonyms in type declarations is common. The only difference is the default public/private access of their members. Since scoped enums have no private members, the only difference between the two is meaningless. Mar 4, 2019 at 16:06
  • 2
    @NicolBolas Not just members. It also affects inheritance. Mar 2, 2021 at 21:51

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