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Home/ Questions/Q 1042915
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T15:35:02+00:00 2026-05-16T15:35:02+00:00

I’m trying to create a simple qDebug-like class I can use to output debug

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I’m trying to create a simple qDebug-like class I can use to output debug messages in debug mode, dependant on some debug level passed when calling the app. I liked the ease of use of the QDebug class (which could be used as a std::cerr and would disappear when compiling in release mode). I have this so far:

#ifdef DEBUG
    static int CAKE_DebugLevel;

    class Debug
    {
        Debug( int level ) : m_output( level <= CAKE_DebugLevel ) {}

        template<typename T>
        Debug& operator<<( T )
        {
            if( m_output )
            {
                std::cout << T;
                return *this;
            }
            else
                return *this;
        }
    private:
        bool m_output;
    };
#else // release mode compile
    #define Debug nullstream
#endif // DEBUG

I think a nullstream-kind of thing would be best for the release mode define:

class nullstream{};

template <typename T>
nullstream& operator<<(nullstream& ns, T)
{
    return ns;
}

In main I have for the moment:

#include "Debug.h"

#include <iostream>

int main()
{
    Debug(0) << "Running debug version of CAKE." << std::endl;
}

Which is giving the following error with gcc 4.5.1:

In member function ‘Debug& CAKE_Debug::operator<<(T)’: expected primary-expression before ‘;’ token (points at the line std::cout << T;)

In function ‘int main(int, char**, char**)’: expected unqualified-id before ‘<<‘ token

I’m sure it’s something simple, but all the general template info I’ve found turns up nothing. Thanks for any help!

If you need more info, please ask.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T15:35:03+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:35 pm

    Your nullstream class has no integral constructor. This means that when you #define Debug nullstream, the compiler can’t recognize Debug(0) – that makes no sense. Debug is not a macro that takes arguments, and if you substitute with nullstream, nullstream has no constructor that takes arguments. #define used this way is oh so wrong. You should have something like this:

    #ifdef _DEBUG
    static int CAKE_Debuglevel;
    #endif
    
    class Debug
    {
        Debug( int level ) 
    #ifdef _DEBUG
        : m_output( level <= CAKE_DebugLevel ) 
    #endif
            {}
    
        template<typename T>
        Debug& operator<<( T t)
        {
            #ifdef _DEBUG
            if( m_output )
            {
                std::cout << t;
                return *this;
            }
            else
            #endif
                return *this;
        }
    private:
    #ifdef _DEBUG
        bool m_output;
    #endif
    };
    

    Now your class really will look and act the same in any environment but only output if _DEBUG is defined. I also fixed the bug where you tried to output a type.

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