10

So, I'm aware that in C++ static members can be initialized inside the class if they are a const literal type like the following

class test{
public:
        static constexpr int stc = 1;
private:
        int a = 0;
        int b = 0;
        int c = 0;
};

and the static constexpr variable stc can be used where the compiler can directly substitute the value of the member i.e

int main () {int array[test::stc];}  

However, if used in a context where the value cannot be directly substituted by the compiler:

int main() { const int &cs = test::stc; } 

then the compiler (clang) generates an error

c++ -std=c++11 -pedantic    t.cpp   -o t
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
  "test::stc", referenced from:
      _main in t-a8ee2a.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64

unless the static member is defined outside the class like so:

constexpr int test::stc;

Why is this the case?

5

3 Answers 3

6

In

int main() { const int &cs = test::stc; } 

test::stc is odr-used while in

int main () {int array[test::stc];}  

it is not.

The following example from the C++11 Standard supports the above idea.

struct S { static const int x = 0; };
const int &f(const int &r);  
int n = b ? (1, S::x)    // S​::​x is not odr-used here
          : f(S::x);     // S​::​x is odr-used here, so a definition is required

Looking at it from practical point of view, cs will be an invalid reference unless test::stc has an address. array, on the other hand, needs just the value of test::stc, which can be evaluated at compile time. array does not need the address of test::stc to be a valid object.

An object that is odr-used must be defined exactly once in a program.

1
2
static constexpr int stc = 1; // declares the static var

constexpr int test::stc; // defines the static var

for more detailed explanation check link below

http://www.learncpp.com/cpp-tutorial/811-static-member-variables/

2

C++17 inline variables

In C++17 if you also mark the static member as inline, then I believe that you can odr-use it freely or have multiple definitions across compilation units, e.g.:

#include <iostream>

class MyClass {
    public:
        inline static constexpr int i = 42;
};


int main() {
    const int &cs = MyClass::i;
    std::cout << cs << std::endl;
    std::cout << &MyClass::i << std::endl;
}

More info at: How do inline variables work?

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.