Namespaces
Variants
Views
Actions

Difference between revisions of "cpp/language/attributes/deprecated"

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | language‎ | attributes
m (;, fmt)
(P2361R6 Unevaluated strings)
Line 15: Line 15:
  
 
{{par begin}}
 
{{par begin}}
{{par|{{spar|string-literal}}|text that could be used to explain the rationale for deprecation and/or to suggest a replacing entity}}
+
{{par|{{spar|string-literal}}|an [[cpp/language/string literal#Unevaluated strings|unevaluated string literal]] that could be used to explain the rationale for deprecation and/or to suggest a replacing entity}}
 
{{par end}}
 
{{par end}}
  

Revision as of 21:38, 23 August 2023

 
 
C++ language
General topics
Flow control
Conditional execution statements
if
Iteration statements (loops)
for
range-for (C++11)
Jump statements
Functions
Function declaration
Lambda function expression
inline specifier
Dynamic exception specifications (until C++17*)
noexcept specifier (C++11)
Exceptions
Namespaces
Types
Specifiers
const/volatile
decltype (C++11)
auto (C++11)
constexpr (C++11)
consteval (C++20)
constinit (C++20)
Storage duration specifiers
Initialization
Expressions
Alternative representations
Literals
Boolean - Integer - Floating-point
Character - String - nullptr (C++11)
User-defined (C++11)
Utilities
Attributes (C++11)
Types
typedef declaration
Type alias declaration (C++11)
Casts
Memory allocation
Classes
Class-specific function properties
explicit (C++11)
static

Special member functions
Templates
Miscellaneous
 
 
Attributes
(C++23)
deprecated
(C++14)
(C++20)
(C++17)
(C++11)
(C++20)
 

Indicates that the name or entity declared with this attribute is deprecated, that is, the use is allowed, but discouraged for some reason.

Contents

Syntax

[[deprecated]] (1)
[[deprecated( string-literal )]] (2)
string-literal - an unevaluated string literal that could be used to explain the rationale for deprecation and/or to suggest a replacing entity

Explanation

Indicates that the use of the name or entity declared with this attribute is allowed, but discouraged for some reason. Compilers typically issue warnings on such uses. The string-literal, if specified, is usually included in the warnings.

This attribute is allowed in declarations of the following names or entities:

A name declared non-deprecated may be redeclared deprecated. A name declared deprecated cannot be un-deprecated by redeclaring it without this attribute.

Example

#include <iostream>
 
[[deprecated]]
void TriassicPeriod()
{
    std::clog << "Triassic Period: [251.9 - 208.5] million years ago.\n";
}
 
[[deprecated("Use NeogenePeriod() instead.")]]
void JurassicPeriod()
{
    std::clog << "Jurassic Period: [201.3 - 152.1] million years ago.\n";
}
 
[[deprecated("Use calcSomethingDifferently(int).")]]    
int calcSomething(int x)
{
    return x * 2;
}
 
int main()
{
    TriassicPeriod();
    JurassicPeriod();
}

Possible output:

Triassic Period: [251.9 - 208.5] million years ago.
Jurassic Period: [201.3 - 152.1] million years ago.
 
main.cpp:20:5: warning: 'TriassicPeriod' is deprecated [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
    TriassicPeriod();
    ^
main.cpp:3:3: note: 'TriassicPeriod' has been explicitly marked deprecated here
[[deprecated]]
  ^
main.cpp:21:5: warning: 'JurassicPeriod' is deprecated: Use NeogenePeriod() instead [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
    JurassicPeriod();
    ^
main.cpp:8:3: note: 'JurassicPeriod' has been explicitly marked deprecated here
[[deprecated("Use NeogenePeriod() instead")]]
  ^
2 warnings generated.

See also

C documentation for deprecated