@EtiennedeMartel There. I'm spoiled now. So, it all plays the same, except you're given three doors to pick in the end. And they all have goats. Reminds me of ME2.
ah curses. This proprietary language doesn't have nested if statements nor no quick-bail on logical and. I can't do if (exists(string1) and strlen(string1)>0) or it returns an error.
@Maxpm it's an interpreted language my company made (some 20+ years ago), to allow customers to customize bits. They don't want to to replace it or the customers will have to change all their stuff.
@MooingDuck : and why just static member variable who get just declared in class and defined outside, so if they get defined inside class they will break the one definiion rule, can you tell me why ?
@AlexDan if it's in a header thats included in two files, that means both of those files will create that static, which violates the "One Definition Rule"
@Maxpm no. If a class has a static int special = 4; and never grabs the address of that, the compiler doesn't care if it was ever defined. But that's a special case for integer types. Because it knows what 4 is, and all 4s are equal, so it ignores the lack of definition.
@MooingDuck If it's a member, and therefore not a definition, I'd have thought that it couldn't be an initialization (else you could have multiple declarations with different initialization values)
@Maxpm because if two files included that same header, both files would have that global variable allocated in them. Thus there would be 2+ instances of that global, which doesn't make sense. (there's ways to fix that, but the rule stands)
@je4d only integer types can be initialized there, and their "magic rules" specify something to address that (same initialization, or only one initialized or something, I don't recall exactly)
@MooingDuck actually, if it's a member I guess you can only have one declaration in any one TU, so it'd just take the initialization value from the declaration that was in the same TU as the definition
"The declaration of a static data member in its class definition is not a definition and may be of an incomplete type other than cv-qualified void. The definition for a static data member shall appear in a namespace scope enclosing the member’s class definition."
"There shall be exactly one definition of a static data member that is odr-used (3.2) in a program; no diagnostic is required."
ooh! "A static data member of literal type can be declared in the class definition with the constexpr specifier;if so, its declaration shall specify a brace-or-equal-initializer in which every initializer-clause that is an assignment-expression is a constant expression. The member shall still be defined in a namespace scope if it is odrused (3.2) in the program and the namespace scope definition shall not contain an initializer."
@Maxpm right, that's why the static can't be defined in the header, only declared, (and sometimes initialized)
//FirstFooUser.cpp #include "Foo.h" #include "Foo.h" <-- include guard makes this do nothing #include "Foo.h" <-- include guard makes this do nothing #include "Foo.h" <-- include guard makes this do nothing
@EtiennedeMartel I wouldn't call that a problem. It makes it easy to pick out the stupid people, and the smart people can have worthwhile discussions with each other.
extern int mike_is_stupid; // put this in all source files!
// and replace "mike" with appropriate cow-worker's name
// and "stupid" with appropriate insult