16

I have two classes; Salary that is intended to hold information and calculations regarding the salary of an employee and Employee that has an object of type class Salary and some members like name and address of the employee...

  • What I want to do is to prevent class Salary from being instantiated except by class Employee. So I declared the constructors of Salary private and made Employee a friend of Salary. But I get errors:

    class Employee;
    
    class Salary {
        public:
    
        private:
            Salary() : revenue_{}, cost_{} {}
            Salary(int x, int y) : revenue_{ x },
            cost_{ y } {
    
            }
            int revenue_, cost_;
            friend class Employee;
    };
    
    class Employee {
        public:
            std::string name_;
            Salary sal;
    };
    
    int main(){
    
        Employee emp{}; // "Salary::Salary()" is inaccessible
    }
    
  • The problem goes away if I forward declare main:

    int main(int, char*[]);
    

    And make main a friend of class Salary like so in Salary:

    class Salary {
        //...
        friend int main(int argc, char* argv[]);
    };
    

Now the program compiles correctly!

*** Another thing in main if I declare an object this way:

Employee emp; // ok
Employee emp{}; // error?
1
  • Why are you making Salary's constructor private? It seems like there are contexts when you'd want to use Salary outside of Employee Apr 23, 2019 at 22:40

4 Answers 4

18

Because you don't provide a constructor for Employee the braces in your initialization Employee emp{}; will perform an aggregate initialization, which essentially means that each member is initialized one-by-one using the default rules, in the context of main(). Since main() doesn't have access to the Salary constructor, it fails.

As others have pointed out, adding an Employee default constructor will resolve your problem:

class Employee {
    public:
        Employee() = default;
        std::string name_;
        Salary sal;
};
3
  • 1
    I'm trying on MSVS and only Employee() {}; allows Employee emp{}; to compile. Clang seems to accept Employee() = default;, but then again, Clang seems to accept having no default constructor here.
    – wally
    Apr 23, 2019 at 22:32
  • 1
    GCC does the same as Clang, and doesn't need a default constructor to compile in this case. Have you tried this answer on any specific compiler?
    – wally
    Apr 23, 2019 at 22:43
  • Thanks. it saves the day!
    – Syfu_H
    Apr 25, 2019 at 7:50
4

You need Employee's ctor to call the ctor of Salary. The ctor of Salary is not accessible from main.

eg:

class Employee {
public:
    Employee() : sal() {}
    public:
        std::string name_;
        Salary sal;
};
1

If you erase the "{}" after "Employee emp" in your main() function it compiles just fine (gcc 7.3.1 on Fedora 27).

3
  • 4
    I recommend explaining why. Apr 23, 2019 at 22:06
  • Yes. Not onyl GCC but also MSVC14 also compiles Employee emp; but why?
    – Syfu_H
    Apr 23, 2019 at 22:07
  • 1
    @Syfu_H Value Initialization. And I could be mistaken here (been caught on this in the past), but the Value Initialization is being replaced by Aggregate Initialization Apr 23, 2019 at 22:15
1

You have to explicitly declare the default constructor of class Employee thus you can initialize an abject via uniform initialization:

class Employee {
    public:
        Employee(){} // add it
        std::string name_;
        Salary sal;
};

int main(){
    Employee emp{}; // now this should compile

}

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