0

In VC++ CLR project I have a class temp. I am trying to set the static variable temp1 to 5.

I am getting a compilation error:

Error 32 error LNK2020: unresolved token (0A0005FB) "public: static int temp::temp1" (?temp1@temp@@2HA) C:\Users\user100\Documents\Visual Studio 2012\NewProject 32 bit\create min bars from data2\create min bars from data\create min bars from data5.obj

Error 33 error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol "public: static int temp::temp1" (?temp1@temp@@2HA) C:\Users\user100\Documents\Visual Studio 2012\NewProject 32 bit\create min bars from data2\create min bars from data\create min bars from data5.obj

How can I fix it?

class temp
{
    public:
    static int temp1;
};

int main(array<System::String ^> ^args)
{
    temp::temp1 = 5;
}
1
  • 5
    int main(array<System::String ^> ^args) does not look like C++ to me.
    – Marius
    Jun 27, 2013 at 21:38

2 Answers 2

6

When declaring a static variable within a class, no memory is actually created. You need a separate variable callout to actually make RAM for it. That is what the compiler is telling you.

//Outside your class declaration:
int temp::temp1;
5

Define your static member variable:

class temp
{
    public:
        static int temp1;
};

int temp::temp1 = 0;

// Fixed main() ;)
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
        temp::temp1 = 5;
        return 0;
}
1
  • 1
    "initialize" is not the correct word. I think "define" would be better. The declaration (inside class) tells the compiler that something exists, somewhere (so it can be compiled against). The definition (with scope-resolution operator ::) tells the compiler where it exists (so it can be linked against). Jun 27, 2013 at 21:46

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