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Home/ Questions/Q 6791213
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T17:49:09+00:00 2026-05-26T17:49:09+00:00

I have a .h file with the following declarations: class Foo{ public: inline int

  • 0

I have a .h file with the following declarations:

class Foo{
public:
    inline int getInt();
};

and my .cu file defines the following:

__device__ int Foo::getInt(){
   return 42;
}

This is pretty awesome, because althought I cannot actually call getInt from host, I can include the .h file in .cpp files so I have the type declaration visible for the host. But for me it doesn’t seem it should work, so why I dont need to put the __device__ attribute on the .h file?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T17:49:10+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 5:49 pm

    If it works, it should not. It is probably a bug in a CUDA compiler and it might get fixed in the future – so do not rely on it.

    However, if you want the class to be visible for the host (and non-cuda compiler), but you have some __device__ functionality which you don’t need on the host, you can always encapsulate those functions with the #ifdef __CUDACC__ — #endif. The __CUDACC__ is predefined when compiling with nvcc, otherwise it is not. So you can write in your header something like:

    class Foo{
    public:
    #ifdef __CUDACC__
        inline __device__ int getInt();
    #endif
    };
    

    If you are afraid of having too many preprocessor ifdefs, you can also do a trick as follows:

    #ifdef __CUDACC__
    #define HOST __host__
    #define DEVICE __device__
    #else
    #define HOST
    #define DEVICE
    #endif
    
    ...
    
    class Foo{
    public:
        inline HOST DEVICE int getInt();
    };
    
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