Using the following code:
#include <stdio.h>
struct my_struct {
int a;
int b;
my_struct();
};
my_struct::my_struct(void)
{
printf("constructor\n");
}
void my_struct(void)
{
printf("standard function\n");
}
int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
struct my_struct s;
s.a = 1;
s.b = 2;
printf("%d-%d\n", s.a, s.b);
return 0;
}
I get a warning compiling with g++ -Wshadow main.cpp:
main.cpp:15:20: warning: ‘void my_struct()’ hides constructor for ‘struct my_struct’
I would be ok with that warning if the void my_struct function actually replaced the my_struct::my_struct one. But it does not appears to be the case. If I run the program, I get:
constructor
1-2
Any idea what this warning mean ? It is quite annoying especially when I include C headers into C++ code
The warning points out that the
my_struct()function has the same name as themy_structstructure. It means you will be unable to write:Because the compiler will think that you’re using a function as a type. However, as you probably realized, you can still instantiate your structure with the
structkeyword: