Is some one able to explain why header files have something like this?
class foo; // This here?
class bar
{
bar();
};
Do you need an include statement when using this?
Thanks.
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The first
class foo;is called a forward declaration of the class foo. It simply lets the compiler know that it exists and that it names a class. This makes foo what is called an “incomplete type” (unless the full declaration of foo has already been seen). With an incomplete type, you can declare pointers of that type, but you cannot allocate instances of that type or do anything that requires knowing its size or members.Such forward declarations are frequently used when two types each may have pointers to each other, in which case both need to be able to express the notion of a pointer to the other type, and so you would have a circular dependency without such a thing. This is needed mostly because C++ uses a single pass mechanism for resolving types; in Java, you can have circular dependencies without forward declarations, because Java uses multiple passes. You may also see forward declarations where the author is under the misguided impression that using forward declarations instead of including the required header reduces compile time; that, of course, is not the case, because you need to include the full declaration (i.e. the header), anyway, and if preprocessor guards are used, then there is basically no difference in compile time.
To answer your question on whether you need the include or not… assuming you only need a partial type, then your header does not need to directly include the header for the type that has been forward declared; however, whoever makes use of your header, when they use your type will need to include the header for the forward declared type, and so you might as well just include the other header.