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Home/ Questions/Q 557333
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T12:00:55+00:00 2026-05-13T12:00:55+00:00

class Namespace::Class; Why do I have to do this?: namespace Namespace { class Class;

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class Namespace::Class;

Why do I have to do this?:

namespace Namespace {
    class Class;
}

Using VC++ 8.0, the compiler issues:

error C2653: ‘Namespace’ : is not a class or namespace name

I assume that the problem here is that the compiler cannot tell whether Namespace is a class or a namespace? But why does this matter since it’s just a forward declaration?

Is there another way to forward-declare a class defined in some namespace? The syntax above feels like I’m “reopening” the namespace and extending its definition. What if Class were not actually defined in Namespace? Would this result in an error at some point?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T12:00:55+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:00 pm

    Because you can’t. In C++ language fully-qualified names are only used to refer to existing (i.e. previously declared) entities. They can’t be used to introduce new entities.

    And you are in fact “reopening” the namespace to declare new entities. If the class Class is later defined as a member of different namespace – it is a completely different class that has nothing to do with the one you declared here.

    Once you get to the point of defining the pre-declared class, you don’t need to “reopen” the namespace again. You can define it in the global namespace (or any namespace enclosing your Namespace) as

    class Namespace::Class {
      /* whatever */
    };
    

    Since you are referring to an entity that has already been declared in namespace Namespace, you can use qualified name Namespace::Class.

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