35

I recently came across some weird looking class that had three constructors:

class Class
{
    public:
        explicit Class(int );

        Class(AnotherClass );

        explicit Class(YetAnotherClass, AnotherClass );

    // ...
}

This doesn't really make sense to me - I thought the explicit keyword is to protect compiler chosen construction from a foreign type.

Is this allowed? If it it, what does it mean?

1

2 Answers 2

54

In C++11 multi-parameter constructors can be implicitly converted to with brace initialization.

However, before C++11 explicit only applied to single-argument constructors. For multiple-argument constructors, it was ignored and had no effect.

3
  • 26
    With the caveat that if all but one of the multi-arg params have default values then it will have an effect
    – zebrabox
    Jul 13, 2009 at 10:28
  • 20
    This has changed with C++11. Now multi-parameter constructors can be implicitly converted to with brace initialisation.
    – Shane
    Oct 2, 2012 at 18:59
  • 2
    In addition to Shane's comment about C++11: see stackoverflow.com/a/4467658
    – gx_
    Sep 19, 2013 at 12:58
0

First of all, constructors with multiple parameters can be used for implicit conversions too:

struct S {
    S(int x, int y = 0);
};

S s = 123; // OK, x = 123, y = 0

While explicit was pointless prior to C++11 in some cases, there was no real benefit to banning it, only extra effort. Even if C++ language designers would have wanted to ban explicit where it's pointless, the rule would be relatively complicated, and not as simple as "allowed for ≤ 1 parameter". See Why is explicit allowed for default constructors and constructors with 2 or more (non-default) parameters? for more on the topic of language design.

Secondly, since C++11, explicit forbids list-initialization without specifying the type:

struct T {
    explicit T(int x, int y);
};

T a{1, 2};    // OK
T b = {1, 2}; // error

T foo() {
    return T{1, 2}; // OK
    return {1, 2};  // error
}

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