We found something similar to the following (don't ask ...):
namespace N {
struct A { struct B; };
}
struct A { struct B; };
using namespace N;
struct ::A::B {}; // <- point of interest
Interestingly, this compiles fine with VS2005, icc 11.1 and Comeau (online), but fails with GCC:
global qualification of class name is invalid before '{' token
From C++03, Annex A, it seems to me like GCC is right:
class-head
can consist of nested-name-specifier
and identifier
nested-name-specifier
can't begin with a global qualification (::
)identifier
... or am i overlooking something?
I think you are getting it right: GCC implements the standard to the letter in this case, while the others implement it less strict (have a look at issue #355).
You could do the following to work-around the limitation of the syntax
struct identity< ::A >::type::B {};
Or you use an explicit named typedef
typedef ::A AHidden;
struct AHidden::B { };
Or, of course, you exchange the order of using namespace
and the nested class definition. Notice that Annex A is informative only. The normative text is at clauses 5.1/7
and 9
.
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