I'm trying to compile code that includes the following header file:
#ifndef FFT_H
#define FFT_H
#include<cmath>
#include<complex.h>
#include<vector>
#define Vec(a, b) std::vector<__typeof(*(a))> ((a), (a)+(b))
typedef double complex complex_t; // this is my trouble line!
typedef double real_t;
#endif
My compiler is tripping up over typedef double complex complex_t;
This makes sense to me because most typedefs include only two arguments: the type, and the alias name.
This published code is from a reputable source so I assume I'm doing something wrong on my end. However, I'm confused as to why a typedef would ever use 3 arguments.
typedef unsigned long long int ull;
— five arguments? (Dubious nomenclature — they aren't really arguments — but that's a separate topic.)<complex.h>
, in what is presumably a C++ compilation. C++ has its own header,<complex>
, that defines the complex types you should be using in C++. You should not attempt to use the C types.typedef
prepended to it. The spec does not say what you claim. The specification of declaration syntax includestypedef
amongst the decl-specifiers (of which there can be any number), there is no special syntax for typedefs