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Linkage of various const/static variables

I have a few questions about the linkage from the following variables. By examples of 7.1.1/7 of C++03 and experimenting with compilers (Comeau, Clang and GCC), I came to the following linkage kinds:

  1. First static, then extern

    static int a; // (a)
    extern int a; // (b) valid, 'a' still internal
    

    It's clear to me with accordance to section 3.5: (a) implies internal linkage. And (b) also implies internal linkage, because the name "a" is declared static (by (a)).

  2. First extern, then static

    extern int b; // (c)
    static int b; // (d) invalid!
    

    First, (c) implies external linkage. But (d) implies internal linkage because the name "b" is declared static by (d). This is invalid according to 7.1.1/7, since the linkage implied is not consistent.

  3. First const, then extern

    const double pi1 = 3.14; // (e)
    extern const double pi1; // (f) valid and 'pi1' is internal
    

    First, (e) implies internal linkage, because it is const, and neither declared explicit extern nor previously implied external linkage. And (f) should imply extern linkage and be an error, because it explicitly declares the name extern, but the compilers keep it internal! Why so? That's my question.

  4. First extern, then const

    extern const double pi2; // (g)
    const double pi2 = 3.14; // (h) valid and 'pi2' is external
    

    Now, (g) implies external linkage because we explicitly declared extern. And (h) also implies external linkage because (g) explicitly declared extern.


I have experimentally found out the linkage for 3 and 4 with the following template (the second argument is required to have external linkage)

template<typename T, T&> struct ensure { };

ensure<const double, pi1> e1; // failed
ensure<const double, pi2> e2; // succeeded

Summary: The Discussion with Charles Bailey turned out to be quite fruitful and showed there are two possible interpretations of 3.5/3, where the important bullet point reads

A name having namespace scope (3.3.5) has internal linkage if it is the name of

  • an object or reference that is explicitly declared const and neither explicitly declared extern nor previously declared to have external linkage;

If we look at point (f), then the two interpretations come to different conclusions, as shown below

  1. The first interpretation notes that pi1 is declared const but is also declared extern. The variable has thus external linkage.

  2. The second interpretation interpretes both occurences of "declared" to refer to the same declaration. In this way, it means that it is declared const, but not extern const. We note that (e) is declared const and not extern const, thus we give pi1 internal linkage.

Now what interpretation is correct? I can't determine from that wording, but compilers seem to interpret this the second way. In particular, if we take the first interpretation, then the last quoted part of 3.5/3 would be superfluous, because there would be no valid scenario in which a name would be declared const and previously declared with external linkage but without an explicit extern.

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Johannes Schaub - litb Avatar asked Aug 21 '10 20:08

Johannes Schaub - litb


1 Answers

const double pi1 = 3.14; // (e)
extern const double pi1; // (f) valid and 'pi1' is internal

My interpretation is as follows. When considering the linkage of a name we consider previous declarations as well as the one being interpreted at this point in the parse. This is why static int a; extern int a; is OK, but extern int b; static int b; is not.

On encountering the first declaration we note that pi1 is explicitly declared const but neither explicitly declared extern nor previously declared to have external linkage. This matches one of the options of 3.5/2 therefore pi1 has internal linkage.

On encountering the second declaration we ask is pi1 the name of an object that is explicitly declared const but neither explicitly declared extern nor [... blah ...]. I contend that it is because it was so declared at point (e). Sure, it isn't declared that way everywhere but in the same way a was the name of an object declared static when we were considering the extern int a; declaration even though it wasn't declared static everywhere. This, to me, means that the declaration (f) doesn't imply a different linkage from declaration (e).

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CB Bailey Avatar answered Sep 27 '22 23:09

CB Bailey