When a range based for loop is used to iterate over an array, without binding a reference to each element, does this constitute an ODR-use of the array?
Example:
struct foo {
static constexpr int xs[] = { 1, 2, 3 };
};
int test(void) {
int sum = 0;
for (int x : foo::xs) // x is not a reference!
sum += x;
return sum;
}
// Definition, if needed
///constexpr foo::xs;
Is the definition of foo::xs
necessary?
While this code, and variations of it, appear to work fine, that doesn't mean the definition is never necessary. Lack of a definition of an ODR-used variable rarely produces a diagnostic, since the variable could be defined in another translation unit. A linker error is the usual result, but it's quite possible to not get the error if the compiler is able to optimize away every use, which is what happens to the above code. The compiler effectively reduces test()
to return 6;
.
Binding a reference to an element would be an ODR-use, but that isn't done.
I was under impression that subscripting an array was not ODR-use in C++14 or later. But the range based for is not exactly subscripting.
In C++17, I believe this example avoids the problem because constexpr class data members are implicitly inline. And thus the declaration in the class also serves to define xs
and an additional namespace scope definition isn't needed to satisfy ODR.
Some additional versions of the same question:
What if we use std::array
?
constexpr std::array<int, 3> xs = { 1, 2, 3 };
What if we avoid the range based for?
for (int i = 0; i < foo::xs.size(); i++) sum += foo::xs[i];
auto && __range = range-expression ;
in it, so I believe that makes it ODR used.extern
, supplying only its size but populating it in another TU. Thestd::array
is a different case: it provides a.size()
member.X[Y]
means*(X+Y)
causing the array-to-pointer conversion, which is generally an ODR-use of an array variable.foo:xs[i]
, which is converted to an rvalue, and so isn't odr-used.