Declarations
Declarations are how names are introduced (or re-introduced) into the C++ program. Not all declarations actually declare anything, and each kind of entity is declared differently. Definitions are declarations that are sufficient to use the entity identified by the name.
A declaration is one of the following:
- Function definition
- Template declaration (including Partial template specialization)
- Explicit template instantiation
- Explicit template specialization
- Namespace definition
- Linkage specification
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(since C++11) |
- Empty declaration (
;
) - A function declaration without a decl-specifier-seq :
attr (optional) declarator ;
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|||||||||
attr | - | (since C++11) sequence of any number of attributes |
declarator | - | a function declarator |
- This declaration must declare a constructor, destructor, or user-defined type conversion function. It can only be used as part of a template declaration, explicit specialization, or explicit instantiation.
- block-declaration (a declaration that can appear inside a block), which, in turn, can be one of the following:
(since C++11) |
(since C++20) | |
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(since C++11) |
- simple declaration
Contents |
[edit] Simple declaration
A simple declaration is a statement that introduces, creates, and optionally initializes one or several identifiers, typically variables.
decl-specifier-seq init-declarator-list (optional) ;
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(1) | ||||||||
attr decl-specifier-seq init-declarator-list;
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(2) | ||||||||
attr | - | (since C++11) sequence of any number of attributes |
decl-specifier-seq | - | sequence of specifiers (see below) |
init-declarator-list | - | comma-separated list of declarators with optional initializers. init-declarator-list is optional when declaring a named class/struct/union or a named enumeration |
A structured binding declaration is also a simple declaration.(since C++17)
[edit] Specifiers
Declaration specifiers (decl-specifier-seq) is a sequence of the following whitespace-separated specifiers, in any order:
- the
typedef
specifier. If present, the entire declaration is a typedef declaration and each declarator introduces a new type name, not an object or a function. - function specifiers (
inline
,virtual
,explicit
), only allowed in function declarations.
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(since C++17) |
- the
friend
specifier, allowed in class and function declarations.
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(since C++11) |
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(since C++20) |
- storage class specifier (register, (until C++17) static, thread_local, (since C++11) extern, mutable). Only one storage class specifier is allowed, except that thread_local may appear together with extern or static(since C++11).
- Type specifiers (type-specifier-seq), a sequence of specifiers that names a type. The type of every entity introduced by the declaration is this type, optionally modified by the declarator (see below). This sequence of specifiers is also used by type-id. Only the following specifiers are part of type-specifier-seq, in any order:
- class specifier
- enum specifier
- simple type specifier
(since C++11) | |
(since C++26) |
- previously declared class name (optionally qualified)
- previously declared enum name (optionally qualified)
- previously declared typedef-name or type alias(since C++11) (optionally qualified)
- template name with template arguments (optionally qualified, optionally using template disambiguator)
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(since C++17) |
-
- the keyword class, struct, or union, followed by the identifier (optionally qualified), previously defined as the name of a class.
- the keyword class, struct, or union, followed by template name with template arguments (optionally qualified, optionally using template disambiguator), previously defined as the name of a class template.
- the keyword enum followed by the identifier (optionally qualified), previously declared as the name of an enumeration.
- only one type specifier is allowed in a decl-specifier-seq, with the following exceptions:
- const can be combined with any type specifier except itself.
- volatile can be combined with any type specifier except itself.
- signed or unsigned can be combined with char, long, short, or int.
- short or long can be combined with int.
- long can be combined with double.
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(since C++11) |
Attributes may appear in decl-specifier-seq, in which case they apply to the type determined by the preceding specifiers.
Repetitions of any specifier in a decl-specifier-seq, such as const static const, or virtual inline virtual are errors, except that long is allowed to appear twice(since C++11).
[edit] Declarators
init-declarator-list is a comma-separated sequence of one or more init-declarators, which have the following syntax:
declarator initializer (optional) | (1) | ||||||||
declarator requires-clause | (2) | (since C++20) | |||||||
declarator | - | the declarator |
initializer | - | optional initializer (except where required, such as when initializing references or const objects). See Initialization for details. |
requires-clause | - | a requires-clause, which adds a constraint to a function declaration |
Each init-declarator in an init-declarator sequence S D1, D2, D3; is processed as if it were a standalone declaration with the same specifiers: S D1; S D2; S D3;.
Each declarator introduces exactly one object, reference, function, or (for typedef declarations) type alias, whose type is provided by decl-specifier-seq and optionally modified by operators such as & (reference to) or [] (array of) or () (function returning) in the declarator. These operators can be applied recursively, as shown below.
A declarator is one of the following:
unqualified-id attr (optional) | (1) | ||||||||
qualified-id attr (optional) | (2) | ||||||||
... identifier attr (optional)
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(3) | (since C++11) | |||||||
* attr (optional) cv (optional) declarator
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(4) | ||||||||
nested-name-specifier * attr (optional) cv (optional) declarator
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(5) | ||||||||
& attr (optional) declarator
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(6) | ||||||||
&& attr (optional) declarator
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(7) | (since C++11) | |||||||
noptr-declarator [ constexpr (optional) ] attr (optional)
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(8) | ||||||||
noptr-declarator ( parameter-list ) cv (optional) ref (optional) except (optional) attr (optional)
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(9) | ||||||||
D
as a pointer to the type determined by decl-specifier-seq S
.D
as a pointer to member of C
of type determined by decl-specifier-seq S
. nested-name-specifier is a sequence of names and scope resolution operators ::
D
as an lvalue reference to the type determined by decl-specifier-seq S
.D
as an rvalue reference to the type determined by decl-specifier-seq S
.
In all cases, attr is an optional sequence of attributes. When appearing immediately after the identifier, it applies to the object being declared. |
(since C++11) |
cv is a sequence of const and volatile qualifiers, where either qualifier may appear at most once in the sequence.
This section is incomplete Reason: explain declaration name hiding rules; how a variable/function declaration hides a class (but not a typedef) with the same name |
[edit] Notes
When a block-declaration appears inside a block, and an identifier introduced by a declaration was previously declared in an outer block, the outer declaration is hidden for the remainder of the block.
If a declaration introduces a variable with automatic storage duration, it is initialized when its declaration statement is executed. All automatic variables declared in a block are destroyed on exit from the block (regardless how the block is exited: via exception, goto, or by reaching its end), in order opposite to their order of initialization.
[edit] Example
Note: this example demonstrates how some complex declarations are parsed in terms of the language grammar. Other popular mnemonics are: the spiral rule, reading inside-out, and declaration mirrors use. There is also an automated parser at https://cdecl.org.
#include <type_traits> struct S { int member; // decl-specifier-seq is "int" // declarator is "member" } obj, *pObj(&obj); // decl-specifier-seq is "struct S { int member; }" // declarator "obj" declares an object of type S // declarator "*pObj" declares a pointer to S, // and initializer "(&obj)" initializes it int i = 1, *p = nullptr, f(), (*pf)(double); // decl-specifier-seq is "int" // declarator "i" declares a variable of type int, // and initializer "= 1" initializes it // declarator "*p" declares a variable of type int*, // and initializer "= nullptr" initializes it // declarator "f()" declares (but doesn't define) // a function taking no arguments and returning int // declarator "(*pf)(double)" declares a pointer to function // taking double and returning int int (*(*var1)(double))[3] = nullptr; // decl-specifier-seq is "int" // declarator is "(*(*var1)(double))[3]" // initializer is "= nullptr" // 1. declarator "(*(*var1)(double))[3]" is an array declarator: // Type declared is: "(*(*var1)(double))" array of 3 elements // 2. declarator "(*(*var1)(double))" is a pointer declarator: // Type declared is: "(*var1)(double)" pointer to array of 3 elements // 3. declarator "(*var1)(double)" is a function declarator: // Type declared is: "(*var1)" function taking "(double)", // returning pointer to array of 3 elements. // 4. declarator "(*var1)" is a pointer declarator: // Type declared is: "var1" pointer to function taking "(double)", // returning pointer to array of 3 elements. // 5. declarator "var1" is an identifier. // This declaration declares the object var1 of type "pointer to function // taking double and returning pointer to array of 3 elements of type int" // The initializer "= nullptr" provides the initial value of this pointer. // C++11 alternative syntax: auto (*var2)(double) -> int (*)[3] = nullptr; // decl-specifier-seq is "auto" // declarator is "(*var2)(double) -> int (*)[3]" // initializer is "= nullptr" // 1. declarator "(*var2)(double) -> int (*)[3]" is a function declarator: // Type declared is: "(*var2)" function taking "(double)", returning "int (*)[3]" // ... int main() { static_assert(std::is_same_v<decltype(var1), decltype(var2)>); }
[edit] Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
CWG 482 | C++98 | the declarators of redeclarations could not be qualified | qualified declarators allowed |
CWG 569 | C++98 | a single standalone semicolon was not a valid declaration | it is an empty declaration, which has no effect |
CWG 1830 | C++98 | repetition of a function specifier in a decl-specifier-seq was allowed | repetition is forbidden |
[edit] See also
C documentation for Declarations
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