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     17 
     18 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
     19 <h1>Language Compatibility</h1>
     20 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
     21 
     22 <p>Clang strives to both conform to current language standards (up to C11
     23   and C++11) and also to implement many widely-used extensions available
     24   in other compilers, so that most correct code will "just work" when
     25   compiled with Clang. However, Clang is more strict than other
     26   popular compilers, and may reject incorrect code that other
     27   compilers allow. This page documents common compatibility and
     28   portability issues with Clang to help you understand and fix the
     29   problem in your code when Clang emits an error message.</p>
     30   
     31 <ul>
     32   <li><a href="#c">C compatibility</a>
     33     <ul>
     34       <li><a href="#inline">C99 inline functions</a></li>
     35       <li><a href="#vector_builtins">"missing" vector __builtin functions</a></li>
     36       <li><a href="#lvalue-cast">Lvalue casts</a></li>
     37       <li><a href="#blocks-in-protected-scope">Jumps to within <tt>__block</tt> variable scope</a></li>
     38       <li><a href="#block-variable-initialization">Non-initialization of <tt>__block</tt> variables</a></li>
     39       <li><a href="#inline-asm">Inline assembly</a></li>
     40     </ul>
     41   </li>
     42   <li><a href="#objective-c">Objective-C compatibility</a>
     43     <ul>
     44       <li><a href="#super-cast">Cast of super</a></li>
     45       <li><a href="#sizeof-interface">Size of interfaces</a></li>
     46       <li><a href="#objc_objs-cast">Internal Objective-C types</a></li>
     47       <li><a href="#c_variables-class">C variables in @class or @protocol</a></li>
     48     </ul>
     49   </li>
     50   <li><a href="#cxx">C++ compatibility</a>
     51     <ul>
     52       <li><a href="#vla">Variable-length arrays</a></li>
     53       <li><a href="#dep_lookup">Unqualified lookup in templates</a></li>
     54       <li><a href="#dep_lookup_bases">Unqualified lookup into dependent bases of class templates</a></li>
     55       <li><a href="#undep_incomplete">Incomplete types in templates</a></li>
     56       <li><a href="#bad_templates">Templates with no valid instantiations</a></li>
     57       <li><a href="#default_init_const">Default initialization of const
     58       variable of a class type requires user-defined default
     59       constructor</a></li>
     60       <li><a href="#param_name_lookup">Parameter name lookup</a></li>
     61     </ul>
     62   </li>
     63   <li><a href="#cxx11">C++11 compatibility</a>
     64     <ul>
     65       <li><a href="#deleted-special-func">Deleted special member
     66   functions</a></li>
     67     </ul>
     68   </li>
     69   <li><a href="#objective-cxx">Objective-C++ compatibility</a>
     70     <ul>
     71       <li><a href="#implicit-downcasts">Implicit downcasts</a></li>
     72     </ul>
     73     <ul>
     74       <li><a href="#class-as-property-name">Using <code>class</code> as a property name</a></li>
     75     </ul>
     76   </li>
     77 </ul>
     78 
     79 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
     80 <h2 id="c">C compatibility</h2>
     81 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
     82 
     83 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
     84 <h3 id="inline">C99 inline functions</h3>
     85 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
     86 <p>By default, Clang builds C code in GNU C11 mode, so it uses standard C99
     87 semantics for the <code>inline</code> keyword. These semantics are different
     88 from those in GNU C89 mode, which is the default mode in versions of GCC
     89 prior to 5.0. For example, consider the following code:</p>
     90 <pre>
     91 inline int add(int i, int j) { return i + j; }
     92 
     93 int main() {
     94   int i = add(4, 5);
     95   return i;
     96 }
     97 </pre>
     98 
     99 <p>In C99, <code>inline</code> means that a function's definition is
    100 provided only for inlining, and that there is another definition
    101 (without <code>inline</code>) somewhere else in the program.  That
    102 means that this program is incomplete, because if <code>add</code>
    103 isn't inlined (for example, when compiling without optimization), then
    104 <code>main</code> will have an unresolved reference to that other
    105 definition.  Therefore we'll get a (correct) link-time error like this:</p>
    106 
    107 <pre>
    108 Undefined symbols:
    109   "_add", referenced from:
    110       _main in cc-y1jXIr.o
    111 </pre>
    112 
    113 <p>By contrast, GNU C89 mode (used by default in older versions of GCC) is the
    114 C89 standard plus a lot of extensions. C89 doesn't have an <code>inline</code>
    115 keyword, but GCC recognizes it as an extension and just treats it as a hint to
    116 the optimizer.</p>
    117 
    118 <p>There are several ways to fix this problem:</p>
    119 
    120 <ul>
    121   <li>Change <code>add</code> to a <code>static inline</code>
    122   function.  This is usually the right solution if only one
    123   translation unit needs to use the function.  <code>static
    124   inline</code> functions are always resolved within the translation
    125   unit, so you won't have to add a non-<code>inline</code> definition
    126   of the function elsewhere in your program.</li>
    127 
    128   <li>Remove the <code>inline</code> keyword from this definition of
    129   <code>add</code>.  The <code>inline</code> keyword is not required
    130   for a function to be inlined, nor does it guarantee that it will be.
    131   Some compilers ignore it completely.  Clang treats it as a mild
    132   suggestion from the programmer.</li>
    133 
    134   <li>Provide an external (non-<code>inline</code>) definition
    135   of <code>add</code> somewhere else in your program.  The two
    136   definitions must be equivalent!</li>
    137 
    138   <li>Compile in the GNU C89 dialect by adding
    139   <code>-std=gnu89</code> to the set of Clang options. This option is
    140   only recommended if the program source cannot be changed or if the
    141   program also relies on additional C89-specific behavior that cannot
    142   be changed.</li>
    143 </ul>
    144 
    145 <p>All of this only applies to C code; the meaning of <code>inline</code>
    146 in C++ is very different from its meaning in either GNU89 or C99.</p>
    147 
    148 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    149 <h3 id="vector_builtins">"missing" vector __builtin functions</h3>
    150 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    151 
    152 <p>The Intel and AMD manuals document a number "<tt>&lt;*mmintrin.h&gt;</tt>"
    153 header files, which define a standardized API for accessing vector operations
    154 on X86 CPUs.  These functions have names like <tt>_mm_xor_ps</tt> and
    155 <tt>_mm256_addsub_pd</tt>.  Compilers have leeway to implement these functions
    156 however they want.  Since Clang supports an excellent set of <a 
    157 href="../docs/LanguageExtensions.html#vectors">native vector operations</a>,
    158 the Clang headers implement these interfaces in terms of the native vector 
    159 operations.
    160 </p>
    161 
    162 <p>In contrast, GCC implements these functions mostly as a 1-to-1 mapping to
    163 builtin function calls, like <tt>__builtin_ia32_paddw128</tt>.  These builtin
    164 functions are an internal implementation detail of GCC, and are not portable to
    165 the Intel compiler, the Microsoft compiler, or Clang.  If you get build errors
    166 mentioning these, the fix is simple: switch to the *mmintrin.h functions.</p>
    167 
    168 <p>The same issue occurs for NEON and Altivec for the ARM and PowerPC
    169 architectures respectively.  For these, make sure to use the &lt;arm_neon.h&gt;
    170 and &lt;altivec.h&gt; headers.</p>
    171 
    172 <p>For x86 architectures this <a href="builtins.py">script</a> should help with
    173 the manual migration process.  It will rewrite your source files in place to
    174 use the APIs instead of builtin function calls. Just call it like this:</p>
    175 
    176 <pre>
    177   builtins.py *.c *.h
    178 </pre>
    179 
    180 <p>and it will rewrite all of the .c and .h files in the current directory to
    181 use the API calls instead of calls like <tt>__builtin_ia32_paddw128</tt>.</p>
    182 
    183 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    184 <h3 id="lvalue-cast">Lvalue casts</h3>
    185 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    186 
    187 <p>Old versions of GCC permit casting the left-hand side of an assignment to a
    188 different type. Clang produces an error on similar code, e.g.,</p>
    189 
    190 <pre>
    191 <b>lvalue.c:2:3: <span class="error">error:</span> assignment to cast is illegal, lvalue casts are not supported</b>
    192   (int*)addr = val;
    193 <span class="caret">  ^~~~~~~~~~ ~</span>
    194 </pre>
    195 
    196 <p>To fix this problem, move the cast to the right-hand side. In this
    197 example, one could use:</p>
    198 
    199 <pre>
    200   addr = (float *)val;
    201 </pre>
    202 
    203 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    204 <h3 id="blocks-in-protected-scope">Jumps to within <tt>__block</tt> variable scope</h3>
    205 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    206 
    207 <p>Clang disallows jumps into the scope of a <tt>__block</tt>
    208 variable.  Variables marked with <tt>__block</tt> require special
    209 runtime initialization. A jump into the scope of a <tt>__block</tt>
    210 variable bypasses this initialization, leaving the variable's metadata
    211 in an invalid state.  Consider the following code fragment:</p>
    212 
    213 <pre>
    214 int fetch_object_state(struct MyObject *c) {
    215   if (!c->active) goto error;
    216 
    217   __block int result;
    218   run_specially_somehow(^{ result = c->state; });
    219   return result;
    220 
    221  error:
    222   fprintf(stderr, "error while fetching object state");
    223   return -1;
    224 }
    225 </pre>
    226 
    227 <p>GCC accepts this code, but it produces code that will usually crash
    228 when <code>result</code> goes out of scope if the jump is taken.  (It's
    229 possible for this bug to go undetected because it often won't crash if
    230 the stack is fresh, i.e. still zeroed.)  Therefore, Clang rejects this
    231 code with a hard error:</p>
    232 
    233 <pre>
    234 <b>t.c:3:5: <span class="error">error:</span> goto into protected scope</b>
    235     goto error;
    236 <span class="caret">    ^</span>
    237 <b>t.c:5:15: <span class="note">note:</note></b> jump bypasses setup of __block variable
    238   __block int result;
    239 <span class="caret">              ^</span>
    240 </pre>
    241 
    242 <p>The fix is to rewrite the code to not require jumping into a
    243 <tt>__block</tt> variable's scope, e.g. by limiting that scope:</p>
    244 
    245 <pre>
    246   {
    247     __block int result;
    248     run_specially_somehow(^{ result = c->state; });
    249     return result;
    250   }
    251 </pre>
    252 
    253 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    254 <h3 id="block-variable-initialization">Non-initialization of <tt>__block</tt>
    255 variables</h3>
    256 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    257 
    258 <p>In the following example code, the <tt>x</tt> variable is used before it is
    259 defined:</p>
    260 <pre>
    261 int f0() {
    262   __block int x;
    263   return ^(){ return x; }();
    264 }
    265 </pre>
    266 
    267 <p>By an accident of implementation, GCC and llvm-gcc unintentionally always
    268 zero initialized <tt>__block</tt> variables. However, any program which depends
    269 on this behavior is relying on unspecified compiler behavior. Programs must
    270 explicitly initialize all local block variables before they are used, as with
    271 other local variables.</p>
    272 
    273 <p>Clang does not zero initialize local block variables, and programs which rely
    274 on such behavior will most likely break when built with Clang.</p>
    275 
    276 
    277 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    278 <h3 id="inline-asm">Inline assembly</h3>
    279 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    280 
    281 <p>In general, Clang is highly compatible with the GCC inline assembly
    282 extensions, allowing the same set of constraints, modifiers and operands as GCC
    283 inline assembly.</p>
    284 
    285 <p>On targets that use the integrated assembler (such as most X86 targets),
    286 inline assembly is run through the integrated assembler instead of your system
    287 assembler (which is most commonly "gas", the GNU assembler).  The LLVM
    288 integrated assembler is extremely compatible with GAS, but there are a couple of
    289 minor places where it is more picky, particularly due to outright GAS bugs.</p>
    290 
    291 <p>One specific example is that the assembler rejects ambiguous X86 instructions
    292 that don't have suffixes.  For example:</p>
    293 
    294 <pre>
    295   asm("add %al, (%rax)");
    296   asm("addw $4, (%rax)");
    297   asm("add $4, (%rax)");
    298 </pre>
    299 
    300 <p>Both clang and GAS accept the first instruction: because the first
    301 instruction uses the 8-bit <tt>%al</tt> register as an operand, it is clear that
    302 it is an 8-bit add.  The second instruction is accepted by both because the "w"
    303 suffix indicates that it is a 16-bit add.  The last instruction is accepted by
    304 GAS even though there is nothing that specifies the size of the instruction (and
    305 the assembler randomly picks a 32-bit add).  Because it is ambiguous, Clang
    306 rejects the instruction with this error message:
    307 </p>
    308 
    309 <pre>
    310 <b>&lt;inline asm&gt;:3:1: <span class="error">error:</span> ambiguous instructions require an explicit suffix (could be 'addb', 'addw', 'addl', or 'addq')</b>
    311 add $4, (%rax)
    312 <span class="caret">^</span>
    313 </pre>
    314 
    315 <p>To fix this compatibility issue, add an explicit suffix to the instruction:
    316 this makes your code more clear and is compatible with both GCC and Clang.</p>
    317 
    318 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    319 <h2 id="objective-c">Objective-C compatibility</h2>
    320 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    321 
    322 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    323 <h3 id="super-cast">Cast of super</h3>
    324 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    325 
    326 <p>GCC treats the <code>super</code> identifier as an expression that
    327 can, among other things, be cast to a different type. Clang treats
    328 <code>super</code> as a context-sensitive keyword, and will reject a
    329 type-cast of <code>super</code>:</p>
    330 
    331 <pre>
    332 <b>super.m:11:12: <span class="error">error:</span> cannot cast 'super' (it isn't an expression)</b>
    333   [(Super*)super add:4];
    334 <span class="caret">   ~~~~~~~~^</span>
    335 </pre>
    336 
    337 <p>To fix this problem, remove the type cast, e.g.</p>
    338 <pre>
    339   [super add:4];
    340 </pre>
    341 
    342 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    343 <h3 id="sizeof-interface">Size of interfaces</h3>
    344 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    345 
    346 <p>When using the "non-fragile" Objective-C ABI in use, the size of an
    347 Objective-C class may change over time as instance variables are added
    348 (or removed). For this reason, Clang rejects the application of the
    349 <code>sizeof</code> operator to an Objective-C class when using this
    350 ABI:</p>
    351 
    352 <pre>
    353 <b>sizeof.m:4:14: <span class="error">error:</span> invalid application of 'sizeof' to interface 'NSArray' in non-fragile ABI</b>
    354   int size = sizeof(NSArray);
    355 <span class="caret">             ^     ~~~~~~~~~</span>
    356 </pre>
    357 
    358 <p>Code that relies on the size of an Objective-C class is likely to
    359 be broken anyway, since that size is not actually constant. To address
    360 this problem, use the Objective-C runtime API function
    361 <code>class_getInstanceSize()</code>:</p>
    362 
    363 <pre>
    364   class_getInstanceSize([NSArray class])
    365 </pre>
    366 
    367 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    368 <h3 id="objc_objs-cast">Internal Objective-C types</h3>
    369 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    370 
    371 <p>GCC allows using pointers to internal Objective-C objects, <tt>struct objc_object*</tt>,
    372 <tt>struct objc_selector*</tt>, and <tt>struct objc_class*</tt> in place of the types
    373 <tt>id</tt>, <tt>SEL</tt>, and <tt>Class</tt> respectively. Clang treats the
    374 internal Objective-C structures as implementation detail and won't do implicit conversions:
    375 
    376 <pre>
    377 <b>t.mm:11:2: <span class="error">error:</span> no matching function for call to 'f'</b>
    378         f((struct objc_object *)p);
    379 <span class="caret">        ^</span>
    380 <b>t.mm:5:6: <span class="note">note:</note></b> candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'struct objc_object *' to 'id' for 1st argument
    381 void f(id x);
    382 <span class="caret">     ^</span>
    383 </pre>
    384 
    385 <p>Code should use types <tt>id</tt>, <tt>SEL</tt>, and <tt>Class</tt>
    386 instead of the internal types.</p>
    387 
    388 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    389 <h3 id="c_variables-class">C variables in @interface or @protocol</h3>
    390 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    391 
    392 <p>GCC allows the declaration of C variables in
    393 an <code>@interface</code> or <code>@protocol</code>
    394 declaration. Clang does not allow variable declarations to appear
    395 within these declarations unless they are marked <code>extern</code>.</p>
    396 
    397 <p>Variables may still be declared in an @implementation.</p>
    398 
    399 <pre>
    400 @interface XX
    401 int a;         // not allowed in clang
    402 int b = 1;     // not allowed in clang
    403 extern int c;  // allowed 
    404 @end
    405 
    406 </pre>
    407 
    408 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    409 <h2 id="cxx">C++ compatibility</h2>
    410 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    411 
    412 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    413 <h3 id="vla">Variable-length arrays</h3>
    414 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    415 
    416 <p>GCC and C99 allow an array's size to be determined at run
    417 time. This extension is not permitted in standard C++. However, Clang
    418 supports such variable length arrays for compatibility with GNU C and
    419 C99 programs.</p>
    420 
    421 <p>If you would prefer not to use this extension, you can disable it with
    422 <tt>-Werror=vla</tt>. There are several ways to fix your code:
    423 
    424 <ol>
    425 <li>replace the variable length array with a fixed-size array if you can
    426     determine a reasonable upper bound at compile time; sometimes this is as
    427     simple as changing <tt>int size = ...;</tt> to <tt>const int size
    428     = ...;</tt> (if the initializer is a compile-time constant);</li>
    429 <li>use <tt>std::vector</tt> or some other suitable container type;
    430     or</li>
    431 <li>allocate the array on the heap instead using <tt>new Type[]</tt> -
    432     just remember to <tt>delete[]</tt> it.</li>
    433 </ol>
    434 
    435 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    436 <h3 id="dep_lookup">Unqualified lookup in templates</h3>
    437 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    438 
    439 <p>Some versions of GCC accept the following invalid code:
    440 
    441 <pre>
    442 template &lt;typename T&gt; T Squared(T x) {
    443   return Multiply(x, x);
    444 }
    445 
    446 int Multiply(int x, int y) {
    447   return x * y;
    448 }
    449 
    450 int main() {
    451   Squared(5);
    452 }
    453 </pre>
    454 
    455 <p>Clang complains:
    456 
    457 <pre>
    458 <b>my_file.cpp:2:10: <span class="error">error:</span> call to function 'Multiply' that is neither visible in the template definition nor found by argument-dependent lookup</b>
    459   return Multiply(x, x);
    460 <span class="caret">         ^</span>
    461 <b>my_file.cpp:10:3: <span class="note">note:</span></b> in instantiation of function template specialization 'Squared&lt;int&gt;' requested here
    462   Squared(5);
    463 <span class="caret">  ^</span>
    464 <b>my_file.cpp:5:5: <span class="note">note:</span></b> 'Multiply' should be declared prior to the call site
    465 int Multiply(int x, int y) {
    466 <span class="caret">    ^</span>
    467 </pre>
    468 
    469 <p>The C++ standard says that unqualified names like <q>Multiply</q>
    470 are looked up in two ways.
    471 
    472 <p>First, the compiler does <i>unqualified lookup</i> in the scope
    473 where the name was written.  For a template, this means the lookup is
    474 done at the point where the template is defined, not where it's
    475 instantiated.  Since <tt>Multiply</tt> hasn't been declared yet at
    476 this point, unqualified lookup won't find it.
    477 
    478 <p>Second, if the name is called like a function, then the compiler
    479 also does <i>argument-dependent lookup</i> (ADL).  (Sometimes
    480 unqualified lookup can suppress ADL; see [basic.lookup.argdep]p3 for
    481 more information.)  In ADL, the compiler looks at the types of all the
    482 arguments to the call.  When it finds a class type, it looks up the
    483 name in that class's namespace; the result is all the declarations it
    484 finds in those namespaces, plus the declarations from unqualified
    485 lookup.  However, the compiler doesn't do ADL until it knows all the
    486 argument types.
    487 
    488 <p>In our example, <tt>Multiply</tt> is called with dependent
    489 arguments, so ADL isn't done until the template is instantiated.  At
    490 that point, the arguments both have type <tt>int</tt>, which doesn't
    491 contain any class types, and so ADL doesn't look in any namespaces.
    492 Since neither form of lookup found the declaration
    493 of <tt>Multiply</tt>, the code doesn't compile.
    494 
    495 <p>Here's another example, this time using overloaded operators,
    496 which obey very similar rules.
    497 
    498 <pre>#include &lt;iostream&gt;
    499 
    500 template&lt;typename T&gt;
    501 void Dump(const T&amp; value) {
    502   std::cout &lt;&lt; value &lt;&lt; "\n";
    503 }
    504 
    505 namespace ns {
    506   struct Data {};
    507 }
    508 
    509 std::ostream&amp; operator&lt;&lt;(std::ostream&amp; out, ns::Data data) {
    510   return out &lt;&lt; "Some data";
    511 }
    512 
    513 void Use() {
    514   Dump(ns::Data());
    515 }</pre>
    516 
    517 <p>Again, Clang complains:</p>
    518 
    519 <pre>
    520 <b>my_file2.cpp:5:13: <span class="error">error:</span> call to function 'operator&lt;&lt;' that is neither visible in the template definition nor found by argument-dependent lookup</b>
    521   std::cout &lt;&lt; value &lt;&lt; "\n";
    522 <span class="caret">            ^</span>
    523 <b>my_file2.cpp:17:3: <span class="note">note:</span></b> in instantiation of function template specialization 'Dump&lt;ns::Data&gt;' requested here
    524   Dump(ns::Data());
    525 <span class="caret">  ^</span>
    526 <b>my_file2.cpp:12:15: <span class="note">note:</span></b> 'operator&lt;&lt;' should be declared prior to the call site or in namespace 'ns'
    527 std::ostream&amp; operator&lt;&lt;(std::ostream&amp; out, ns::Data data) {
    528 <span class="caret">              ^</span>
    529 </pre>
    530 
    531 <p>Just like before, unqualified lookup didn't find any declarations
    532 with the name <tt>operator&lt;&lt;</tt>.  Unlike before, the argument
    533 types both contain class types: one of them is an instance of the
    534 class template type <tt>std::basic_ostream</tt>, and the other is the
    535 type <tt>ns::Data</tt> that we declared above.  Therefore, ADL will
    536 look in the namespaces <tt>std</tt> and <tt>ns</tt> for
    537 an <tt>operator&lt;&lt;</tt>.  Since one of the argument types was
    538 still dependent during the template definition, ADL isn't done until
    539 the template is instantiated during <tt>Use</tt>, which means that
    540 the <tt>operator&lt;&lt;</tt> we want it to find has already been
    541 declared.  Unfortunately, it was declared in the global namespace, not
    542 in either of the namespaces that ADL will look in!
    543 
    544 <p>There are two ways to fix this problem:</p>
    545 <ol><li>Make sure the function you want to call is declared before the
    546 template that might call it.  This is the only option if none of its
    547 argument types contain classes.  You can do this either by moving the
    548 template definition, or by moving the function definition, or by
    549 adding a forward declaration of the function before the template.</li>
    550 <li>Move the function into the same namespace as one of its arguments
    551 so that ADL applies.</li></ol>
    552 
    553 <p>For more information about argument-dependent lookup, see
    554 [basic.lookup.argdep].  For more information about the ordering of
    555 lookup in templates, see [temp.dep.candidate].
    556 
    557 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    558 <h3 id="dep_lookup_bases">Unqualified lookup into dependent bases of class templates</h3>
    559 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    560 
    561 <p>Some versions of GCC accept the following invalid code:
    562 
    563 <pre>
    564 template &lt;typename T&gt; struct Base {
    565   void DoThis(T x) {}
    566   static void DoThat(T x) {}
    567 };
    568 
    569 template &lt;typename T&gt; struct Derived : public Base&lt;T&gt; {
    570   void Work(T x) {
    571     DoThis(x);  // Invalid!
    572     DoThat(x);  // Invalid!
    573   }
    574 };
    575 </pre>
    576 
    577 Clang correctly rejects it with the following errors
    578 (when <tt>Derived</tt> is eventually instantiated):
    579 
    580 <pre>
    581 <b>my_file.cpp:8:5: <span class="error">error:</span> use of undeclared identifier 'DoThis'</b>
    582     DoThis(x);
    583 <span class="caret">    ^</span>
    584     this-&gt;
    585 <b>my_file.cpp:2:8: <span class="note">note:</note></b> must qualify identifier to find this declaration in dependent base class
    586   void DoThis(T x) {}
    587 <span class="caret">       ^</span>
    588 <b>my_file.cpp:9:5: <span class="error">error:</span> use of undeclared identifier 'DoThat'</b>
    589     DoThat(x);
    590 <span class="caret">    ^</span>
    591     this-&gt;
    592 <b>my_file.cpp:3:15: <span class="note">note:</note></b> must qualify identifier to find this declaration in dependent base class
    593   static void DoThat(T x) {}
    594 </pre>
    595 
    596 Like we said <a href="#dep_lookup">above</a>, unqualified names like
    597 <tt>DoThis</tt> and <tt>DoThat</tt> are looked up when the template
    598 <tt>Derived</tt> is defined, not when it's instantiated.  When we look
    599 up a name used in a class, we usually look into the base classes.
    600 However, we can't look into the base class <tt>Base&lt;T&gt;</tt>
    601 because its type depends on the template argument <tt>T</tt>, so the
    602 standard says we should just ignore it.  See [temp.dep]p3 for details.
    603 
    604 <p>The fix, as Clang tells you, is to tell the compiler that we want a
    605 class member by prefixing the calls with <tt>this-&gt;</tt>:
    606 
    607 <pre>
    608   void Work(T x) {
    609     <b>this-&gt;</b>DoThis(x);
    610     <b>this-&gt;</b>DoThat(x);
    611   }
    612 </pre>
    613 
    614 Alternatively, you can tell the compiler exactly where to look:
    615 
    616 <pre>
    617   void Work(T x) {
    618     <b>Base&lt;T&gt;</b>::DoThis(x);
    619     <b>Base&lt;T&gt;</b>::DoThat(x);
    620   }
    621 </pre>
    622 
    623 This works whether the methods are static or not, but be careful:
    624 if <tt>DoThis</tt> is virtual, calling it this way will bypass virtual
    625 dispatch!
    626 
    627 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    628 <h3 id="undep_incomplete">Incomplete types in templates</h3>
    629 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    630 
    631 <p>The following code is invalid, but compilers are allowed to accept it:
    632 
    633 <pre>
    634   class IOOptions;
    635   template &lt;class T&gt; bool read(T &amp;value) {
    636     IOOptions opts;
    637     return read(opts, value);
    638   }
    639 
    640   class IOOptions { bool ForceReads; };
    641   bool read(const IOOptions &amp;opts, int &amp;x);
    642   template bool read&lt;&gt;(int &amp;);
    643 </pre>
    644 
    645 The standard says that types which don't depend on template parameters
    646 must be complete when a template is defined if they affect the
    647 program's behavior.  However, the standard also says that compilers
    648 are free to not enforce this rule.  Most compilers enforce it to some
    649 extent; for example, it would be an error in GCC to
    650 write <tt>opts.ForceReads</tt> in the code above.  In Clang, we feel
    651 that enforcing the rule consistently lets us provide a better
    652 experience, but unfortunately it also means we reject some code that
    653 other compilers accept.
    654 
    655 <p>We've explained the rule here in very imprecise terms; see
    656 [temp.res]p8 for details.
    657 
    658 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    659 <h3 id="bad_templates">Templates with no valid instantiations</h3>
    660 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    661 
    662 <p>The following code contains a typo: the programmer
    663 meant <tt>init()</tt> but wrote <tt>innit()</tt> instead.
    664 
    665 <pre>
    666   template &lt;class T&gt; class Processor {
    667     ...
    668     void init();
    669     ...
    670   };
    671   ...
    672   template &lt;class T&gt; void process() {
    673     Processor&lt;T&gt; processor;
    674     processor.innit();       // <-- should be 'init()'
    675     ...
    676   }
    677 </pre>
    678 
    679 Unfortunately, we can't flag this mistake as soon as we see it: inside
    680 a template, we're not allowed to make assumptions about "dependent
    681 types" like <tt>Processor&lt;T&gt;</tt>.  Suppose that later on in
    682 this file the programmer adds an explicit specialization
    683 of <tt>Processor</tt>, like so:
    684 
    685 <pre>
    686   template &lt;&gt; class Processor&lt;char*&gt; {
    687     void innit();
    688   };
    689 </pre>
    690 
    691 Now the program will work &mdash; as long as the programmer only ever
    692 instantiates <tt>process()</tt> with <tt>T = char*</tt>!  This is why
    693 it's hard, and sometimes impossible, to diagnose mistakes in a
    694 template definition before it's instantiated.
    695 
    696 <p>The standard says that a template with no valid instantiations is
    697 ill-formed.  Clang tries to do as much checking as possible at
    698 definition-time instead of instantiation-time: not only does this
    699 produce clearer diagnostics, but it also substantially improves
    700 compile times when using pre-compiled headers.  The downside to this
    701 philosophy is that Clang sometimes fails to process files because they
    702 contain broken templates that are no longer used.  The solution is
    703 simple: since the code is unused, just remove it.
    704 
    705 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    706 <h3 id="default_init_const">Default initialization of const variable of a class type requires user-defined default constructor</h3>
    707 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    708 
    709 <p>If a <tt>class</tt> or <tt>struct</tt> has no user-defined default
    710 constructor, C++ doesn't allow you to default construct a <tt>const</tt>
    711 instance of it like this ([dcl.init], p9):
    712 
    713 <pre>
    714 class Foo {
    715  public:
    716   // The compiler-supplied default constructor works fine, so we
    717   // don't bother with defining one.
    718   ...
    719 };
    720 
    721 void Bar() {
    722   const Foo foo;  // Error!
    723   ...
    724 }
    725 </pre>
    726 
    727 To fix this, you can define a default constructor for the class:
    728 
    729 <pre>
    730 class Foo {
    731  public:
    732   Foo() {}
    733   ...
    734 };
    735 
    736 void Bar() {
    737   const Foo foo;  // Now the compiler is happy.
    738   ...
    739 }
    740 </pre>
    741 
    742 An upcoming change to the C++ standard is expected to weaken this rule to only
    743 apply when the compiler-supplied default constructor would leave a member
    744 uninitialized. Clang implements the more relaxed rule in version 3.8 onwards.
    745 
    746 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    747 <h3 id="param_name_lookup">Parameter name lookup</h3>
    748 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    749 
    750 <p>Some versions of GCC allow the redeclaration of function parameter names within a function prototype in C++ code, e.g.</p>
    751 <blockquote>
    752 <pre>
    753 void f(int a, int a);
    754 </pre>
    755 </blockquote>
    756 <p>Clang diagnoses this error (where the parameter name has been redeclared). To fix this problem, rename one of the parameters.</p>
    757 
    758 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    759 <h2 id="cxx11">C++11 compatibility</h2>
    760 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    761 
    762 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    763 <h3 id="deleted-special-func">Deleted special member functions</h3>
    764 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    765 
    766 <p>In C++11, the explicit declaration of a move constructor or a move
    767 assignment operator within a class deletes the implicit declaration
    768 of the copy constructor and copy assignment operator. This change came
    769 fairly late in the C++11 standardization process, so early
    770 implementations of C++11 (including Clang before 3.0, GCC before 4.7,
    771 and Visual Studio 2010) do not implement this rule, leading them to
    772 accept this ill-formed code:</p>
    773 
    774 <pre>
    775 struct X {
    776   X(X&amp;&amp;); <i>// deletes implicit copy constructor:</i>
    777   <i>// X(const X&amp;) = delete;</i>
    778 };
    779 
    780 void f(X x);
    781 void g(X x) {
    782   f(x); <i>// error: X has a deleted copy constructor</i>
    783 }
    784 </pre>
    785 
    786 <p>This affects some early C++11 code, including Boost's popular <a
    787 href="http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/release/libs/smart_ptr/shared_ptr.htm"><tt>shared_ptr</tt></a>
    788 up to version 1.47.0. The fix for Boost's <tt>shared_ptr</tt> is
    789 <a href="https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/changeset/73202">available here</a>.</p>
    790 
    791 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    792 <h2 id="objective-cxx">Objective-C++ compatibility</h2>
    793 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    794 
    795 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    796 <h3 id="implicit-downcasts">Implicit downcasts</h3>
    797 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    798 
    799 <p>Due to a bug in its implementation, GCC allows implicit downcasts
    800 of Objective-C pointers (from a base class to a derived class) when
    801 calling functions. Such code is inherently unsafe, since the object
    802 might not actually be an instance of the derived class, and is
    803 rejected by Clang. For example, given this code:</p>
    804 
    805 <pre>
    806 @interface Base @end
    807 @interface Derived : Base @end
    808 
    809 void f(Derived *p);
    810 void g(Base *p) {
    811   f(p);
    812 }
    813 </pre>
    814 
    815 <p>Clang produces the following error:</p>
    816 
    817 <pre>
    818 <b>downcast.mm:6:3: <span class="error">error:</span> no matching function for call to 'f'</b>
    819   f(p);
    820 <span class="caret">  ^</span>
    821 <b>downcast.mm:4:6: <span class="note">note:</note></b> candidate function not viable: cannot convert from
    822       superclass 'Base *' to subclass 'Derived *' for 1st argument
    823 void f(Derived *p);
    824 <span class="caret">     ^</span>
    825 </pre>
    826 
    827 <p>If the downcast is actually correct (e.g., because the code has
    828 already checked that the object has the appropriate type), add an
    829 explicit cast:</p>
    830 
    831 <pre>
    832   f((Derived *)base);
    833 </pre>
    834 
    835 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    836 <h3 id="class-as-property-name">Using <code>class</code> as a property name</h3>
    837 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    838 
    839 <p>In C and Objective-C, <code>class</code> is a normal identifier and
    840 can be used to name fields, ivars, methods, and so on.  In
    841 C++, <code>class</code> is a keyword.  For compatibility with existing
    842 code, Clang permits <code>class</code> to be used as part of a method
    843 selector in Objective-C++, but this does not extend to any other part
    844 of the language.  In particular, it is impossible to use property dot
    845 syntax in Objective-C++ with the property name <code>class</code>, so
    846 the following code will fail to parse:</p>
    847 
    848 <pre>
    849 @interface I {
    850 int cls;
    851 }
    852 + (int)class;
    853 @end
    854 
    855 @implementation  I
    856 - (int) Meth { return I.class; }
    857 @end
    858 </pre>
    859 
    860 <p>Use explicit message-send syntax instead, i.e. <code>[I class]</code>.</p>
    861 
    862 </div>
    863 </body>
    864 </html>
    865