Say I have the following example:
#include <cstdlib>
class A {
public:
static const std::size_t value = 42;
};
In short, I have (or better, want) a class A with a static const std::size_t member called value with the value 42 (determined at compile time).
Now, IIRC, this only works fine under certain circumstances. It doesn't, for example, when you take the address of A::value. In order for this to work fine in all cases you'd need to add a definition in some implementation file:
const std::size_t A::value;
However, I can't do this, because I want this file to be header-only. Another common solution is this:
class A {
public:
enum { value = 42 };
};
I don't like this solution either, because I'd like the type of A::value to be std::size_t.
What is a good solution to this problem? Preferably a small and portable solution, not something with huge macro magic like BOOST_STATIC_CONSTANT.
I'd like a solution for C++03, not C++11 (it's trivial there).
enum class enum_name : std::size_t { value = 42 };to ensure the type isstd::size_t– Praetorian Sep 7 '12 at 21:55