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Home/ Questions/Q 6037663
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T06:06:26+00:00 2026-05-23T06:06:26+00:00

I have read somewhere that the C++ standard does not allow something like enum

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I have read somewhere that the C++ standard does not allow something like enum an_enum { a, b, c, };, while later versions of C (I think from mid-90s) do allow such declarations with trailing commas. If C++ is supposed to have backwards compatibility with C, how come this feature is forbidden? Any special reason?

I also read that such trailing commas are actually good, so that just adds to the confusion.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T06:06:27+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 6:06 am

    C++03 (which is a fairly minor update of C++98) bases its C compatibility on C89 (also known as C90, depending on whether you’re ANSI or ISO). C89 doesn’t allow the trailing comma. C99 does allow it. C++11 does allow it (7.2/1 has the grammar for an enum declaration).

    In fact C++ isn’t entirely backward-compatible even with C89, although this is the kind of thing that if had it been in C89, you’d expect C++ to permit it.

    The key advantage to me of the trailing comma is when you write this:

    enum Channel {
        RED,
        GREEN,
        BLUE,
    };
    

    and then later change it to this:

    enum Channel {
        RED,
        GREEN,
        BLUE,
        ALPHA,
    };
    

    It’s nice that only one line is changed when you diff the versions. To get the same effect when there’s no trailing comma allowed, you could write:

    enum Channel {
        RED
       ,GREEN
       ,BLUE
    };
    

    But (a) that’s crazy talk, and (b) it doesn’t help in the (admittedly rare) case that you want to add the new value at the beginning.

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