33

I'm trying to learn templates in C++ and I have the following code :

#include <stack>

template<typename T>
class   myClass : public std::stack<T>{
public:
    myClass(void);
    myClass(myClass const & src);
    virtual ~myClass(void);
    myClass &   operator=(myClass const & rhs);
};

template<typename T>
myClass::myClass(void) : std::stack<T>(){
}

But I can't figure out why I get the following when I try to compile :

test.cpp:17:1: error: 'myClass' is not a class, namespace, or enumeration
myClass::myClass(void) : std::stack<T>(){
^
test.cpp:8:9: note: 'myClass' declared here
class   myClass : public std::stack<T>{
        ^
1 error generated.

It looks like the definition of the function causes the error, but I don't know why I get this error, it looks OK to me (even if I guess it's not really OK), just a syntax error perhaps?..

I compile with clang++ -Wall -Werror -Wextra -c.

What could cause this error?

2
  • 2
    Side note: You don't need to specify void if a function has no parameters, just use myClass();.
    – user657267
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:18
  • 1
    @user657267 That's true, indeed, but I have to use it in my school for programming style reason (asked by my school, I took the habit).
    – vmonteco
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:22

1 Answer 1

50

You need to specify the template parameter for it, since myClass is a class template.

template<typename T>
myClass<T>::myClass(void) : std::stack<T>() {
//     ^^^
}

LIVE


BTW: : std::stack<T>() seems to be redundant.

6
  • That was it! thank you very much, that was a stupid question perhaps, my bad! Is that because the compiler needs this parameter needs to "instanciate" the class before defining its member functions? (I may be wrong though, I'm simply trying to understand the purpose of this)
    – vmonteco
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:25
  • @vmonteco I don't think so. I think the compiler just think myClass should be followed by <>, because it's a template. So said differently, the compiler can't find a non-template class named myClass.
    – leslie.yao
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:27
  • @songyuanyo I just found out it's also required if I pass it as a parameter, so I guess it's a part of the class definition as a type? (Perhaps it's something like myClass -> template and myClass<T> -> class created with the template?), (BTW, what do you mean by "std::stack<T>()" is redundant, I could do without in this case?
    – vmonteco
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:30
  • 1
    @vmonteco Yes, it's a part of the class. : std::stack<T>() is redundant, because the base class will be default constructed if you don't specify anthing. It'll be useful if you want the base class to be constructed specially, sush as : std::stack<T>(std::vector<T>()).
    – leslie.yao
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:42
  • It makes sense, I get it. Thank you for these explanations!
    – vmonteco
    Jan 15, 2016 at 2:47

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