VS2008 C++ "interface" as a parameter name fails to compile - c++

As the title says, I'm getting a compiler error in a VS2008 C++ program. I'm not sure how better to describe my problem than in code. The following compiles unless I uncomment the TEST line.
#include <windows.h>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
//#define TEST //<-- uncomment for error
#ifdef TEST
void test(void* interface)
{
return;
}
#endif
int main()
{
cout << "Hello World" << endl;
system("PAUSE");
return(0);
}
When uncommented I get the following errors:
1>main.cpp(7) : error C2332: 'struct' : missing tag name
1>main.cpp(7) : error C2144: syntax error : '<unnamed-tag>' should be preceded by ')'
1>main.cpp(7) : error C2144: syntax error : '<unnamed-tag>' should be preceded by ';'
1>main.cpp(7) : error C2059: syntax error : ')'
1>main.cpp(8) : warning C4094: untagged 'struct' declared no symbols
1>main.cpp(8) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before '{'
1>main.cpp(8) : error C2447: '{' : missing function header (old-style formal list?)
This is unmanaged code, so I'm not sure what the issue with the word interface is. Is there any way to get this code to compile as is, or do I have to change every instance of the term interface to something else?
Thanks!

If your code needs to include Windows.h then you should avoid using the name interface as it's reserved for the use that the Windows SDK has reserved for it (essentially it's a synonym for the keyword struct). There are probably hacks to work around that problem (you could #undef interface after including the SDK headers), but you should probably avoid using that identifier.

The word interface is reserved by MSVC++, as it is a non-standard keyword added by Microsoft Compiler, which is used to define interface in MSVC++.
So use a different name for the parameter, something like this:
#ifdef TEST
void test(void* test_interface)
{
return;
}
#endif

Related

When im moving a class to a header file i get an error C++

Something annoying is going on here and I hope the community can help me :). My program is working correctly when I have my class in the cpp file. When I move my class code into a header file the program throws errors. Please instruct me. Thank you!
.cpp file
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include "CSquare.h"
using namespace std;
int main()
{
CSquare alo(1,"name");
}
CSquare.h
#pragma once
class CSquare
{
private:
int squareCode;
string squareName;
public:
CSquare(int, string);
void setCode(int);
void setName(string);
};
CSquare::CSquare(int inputSquareCode, string inputSquareName)
{
setCode(inputSquareCode);
setName(inputSquareName);
}
void CSquare::setCode(int inputSquareCode)
{
squareCode = inputSquareCode;
}
void CSquare::setName(string inputSquareName)
{
squareName = inputSquareName;
}
I have also tried moving the #include string in both files but still, nothing seems to fix the problem :/
error C3646: 'squareName': unknown override specifier error C4430: missing type specifier - int assumed. Note: C++ does not support default-int error C2061: syntax error: identifier 'string' C2061: syntax
error: identifier 'string' – Mash 16 mins ago
error C2061: syntax error: identifier 'string'
error C2065: 'inputSquareName': undeclared identifier
error C2065: 'string': undeclared identifier error C2146: syntax error: missing ')' before identifier 'inputSquareName'
error C2143: syntax
error: missing ';' before '{'
error C2447: '{': missing function header (old-style formal list?)
error C2661: 'CSquare::CSquare': no overloaded function takes 2 arguments –
CSquare.h lacks the definition for the type string.
Solution: Perhaps you intended to use std::string. In that case you must include <string> in CSquare.h and use the scope resolution operator to refer to the string declared in the std namespace. See the first sentence of this paragraph for an example.
CSquare.h contains definitions to non-inline functions. If the header is included in more than one translation unit, then you violate the one definition rule.
In the entire program, an object or non-inline function cannot have more than one definition
Solution: Either define the functions in a single source file, or declare the functions inline.

if statement within namespace gives error

I have the following piece of C++ code which compiles without problem:
namespace namespace_top_of_FDD{
int int_systemReturn=system("pause | echo scope: namespace_top_of_FDD");
FDD*FDD_Ptr_Object=NULL;
//if(true){}
}
But when I add if statement, like the following, I get the following error massages, I'm wondering why.
namespace namespace_top_of_FDD{
int int_systemReturn=system("pause | echo scope: namespace_top_of_FDD");
FDD*FDD_Ptr_Object=NULL;
if(true){}
}
Error messages (when I use if statement):
1>.\FDD.cpp(6) : error C2059: syntax error : 'if'
1>.\FDD.cpp(6) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before '{'
1>.\FDD.cpp(6) : error C2447: '{' : missing function header (old-style formal list?)
Code in namespaces may contain only declarations and/or definitions (which in turn are declarations). You may not place executable statements similar to the if statement.

C++ code compiles in CentOS g++, but not in Visual studio 2008

I have a problem: My codes work well in CentOS g++, but when I compile them in visual studio 2008, the visual studio tells me errors like below:
1.c:\program files (x86)\microsoft visual studio 9.0\vc\include\codeanalysis\sourceannotations.h(19) : error C2144: syntax error : '__w64 unsigned int' should be preceded by '}'
2.error C2143: syntax error : missing '}' before 'namespace'.
My file coding is UTF-8. Should I change them in Unicode all, I change some error file in Unicode,it still has errors like above.
below are some sourecode:
#ifndef ENRC_CODE_DEFS_H
#define ENRC_CODE_DEFS_H
enum ENReturnCode
{
ENRC_SUCCESS = 0,
ENRC_FAILED,
ENRC_NODATA,
ENRC_CONFIG_NOT_AVAILABLE,
ENRC_INVALID_SUBSCRIBE_ID,
ENRC_INVALID_SUBSCRIBE_CONDITION,
ENRC_INVALID_SUBSCRIBER,
ENRC_INVALID_PARAMETER,
ENRC_THREAD_RUNNING,
ENRC_SUBSCRIBE_LIST_EMPTY,
ENRC_OUT_OF_MEMORY // 10
}
e:\my_code\cppcommon\include\errordefs.h(5) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before 'enum [tag]'
next:
#ifndef EN_SMS_SRC_TAO2CPP_H_
#define EN_SMS_SRC_TAO2CPP_H_
#include "SystemMonitorMasterServiceC.h"
#include "SystemMonitorSlaveServiceC.h"
#include "CommonDefs.h"
#include "SystemMonitorServiceDataDefs.h"
namespace EN
{
namespace SMS
{
template < typename _Ty, typename _Cy>
inline
void Tao2Cpp_Enum(_Ty taoValue, _Cy &cppValue)
{
cppValue = (_Cy)taoValue;
}
error C2143: syntax error : missing '}' before 'namespace'
A lot of errors like above.
Thanks. I waste some time to make it easy to read.
You need a semi-colon in the enum declaration:
enum ENReturnCode
{
...
};

Boost Unit Testing and Visual Studio 2005/Visual C++ and the BOOST_AUTO_TEST_SUITE(stringtest) namespace?

I'm reading this article on the Boost Unit Testing Framework.
However I'm having a bit of trouble with the first example, my guess is that they left something out (something that would be obvious to hardcore C++ coders) as IBM often does in their articles. Another possibility is that my Visual Studio 2005 C++ compiler is just too old for the example.
#include "stdafx.h"
#define BOOST_TEST_MODULE stringtest
#include <boost/test/unit_test.hpp>
//#include "mystring.h"
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_SUITE(stringtest) // name of the test suite is stringtest
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE(test1)
{
/*
mystring s;
BOOST_CHECK(s.size() == 0);
*/
BOOST_CHECK(0 == 0);
}
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE(test2)
{
/*
mystring s;
s.setbuffer("hello world");
BOOST_REQUIRE_EQUAL('h', s[0]); // basic test
*/
BOOST_CHECK(0 == 0);
}
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_SUITE_END()
To me the BOOST_AUTO_TEST_SUITE and BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE lines look a little suspect (especially since they don't have quotes around the arguments, and they are undeclared identifiers...but this probably means they are macros and I'm not certain I understand the concept or if that is available in VC++ 8.0)...
#ifdef _MYSTRING
#define _MYSTRING
class mystring {
char* buffer;
int length;
public:
void setbuffer(char* s) { buffer s = s; length = strlen(s); }
char& operator[ ] (const int index) { return buffer[index]; }
int size() {return length; }
}
#endif
Is there any reason why this code won't work?
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(7) : error C2065: 'stringtest' : undeclared identifier
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(9) : error C4430: missing type specifier - int assumed. Note: C++ does not support default-int
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(9) : error C2146: syntax error : missing ';' before identifier 'BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE'
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(9) : error C2065: 'test1' : undeclared identifier
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(10) : error C2448: 'BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE' : function-style initializer appears to be a function definition
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(18) : error C2065: 'test2' : undeclared identifier
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(19) : error C2448: 'BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE' : function-style initializer appears to be a function definition
1>c:\users\andy\documents\visual studio 2005\projects\unittesttests\unittesttests\unittesttests.cpp(29) : fatal error C1004: unexpected end-of-file found
Looks correct to me. My Boost.Test code looks the same way. I'm running VS2008, but I know it works in 2005 as well.
Seems like your problem lies elsewhere.
If you use precompiled headers (and why do you do that in such a small test program?), shouldn't stdafx.h be included as the very first thing in the file?
And what is the first line for? You don't seem to use it, and _MYSTRING is a reserved name in C++ (everything that begins with underscore followed by a capital letter is off limits)

Why does the order of my #includes matter? (C++)

I've created a header file called "list_dec.h", put it in a folder "C:\Headers", and set my compiler to include files from "C:\Headers", so now I can do things like
#include<list_dec.h>
int main(){return(0);}
but when I try to do something like
#include<iostream>
#include<list_dec.h>
int main(){return(0);}
I get an error (not anything specific, just a huge list of syntax errors in "list_dec.h", which I know aren't real because I've been able to compile it as both a main.cpp file and a .h file in a separate project). However, when I change to order so "list_dec.h" is on top:
#include<list_dec.h>
#include<iostream>
int main(){return(0);}
all of the errors go away. So why does the order of the error matter?
NB: As far as I know, this occurs when I use "list_dec.h" with all header files, but the files I'm absolutely positive it occurs in are:
#include<iostream>
#include<vector>
#include<time.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
EDIT: These are the errors I get when "list_dec.h" is below any other header:
c:\headers\list_dec.h(14) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ')' before 'constant'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(51) : see reference to class template instantiation 'list<T,limit>' being compiled
c:\headers\list_dec.h(14) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before 'constant'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(14) : error C2059: syntax error : ')'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(14) : error C2238: unexpected token(s) preceding ';'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(69) : warning C4346: 'list<T,limit>::{ctor}' : dependent name is not a type
prefix with 'typename' to indicate a type
c:\headers\list_dec.h(69) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ')' before 'constant'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(69) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before 'constant'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(69) : error C2988: unrecognizable template declaration/definition
c:\headers\list_dec.h(69) : error C2059: syntax error : 'constant'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(69) : error C2059: syntax error : ')'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(78) : error C2065: 'T' : undeclared identifier
c:\headers\list_dec.h(78) : error C2065: 'limit' : undeclared identifier
c:\headers\list_dec.h(78) : error C2065: 'T' : undeclared identifier
c:\headers\list_dec.h(78) : error C2065: 'limit' : undeclared identifier
c:\headers\list_dec.h(79) : error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before '{'
c:\headers\list_dec.h(79) : error C2447: '{' : missing function header (old-style formal list?)
If it helps, these are the lines mentioned in the errors (14, 69, 78, and 79):
Line 14: list(const T& NULL); (A constructor for "list" class)
Line 69: inline list<T, limit>::list(const T& NULL): (Definition for the constructor, also, the colon at the end is intentional, It part of the definion ie: void x(int n): VAR(n).)
Line 78: inline list<T, limit>::list(const list<T, limit>& lst) (def for the copy constructor)
Line 79: { (the begining of the list-copy contructor)
And a lot of people want to see the beginning of "list_dec.h":
template<class T, size_t limit>
class list
NB: These aren't the first lines, but they're where I think the problem is, the lines before them are simply an enumeration called "err".
EDIT: Just a note, "list_dec.h" contains no includes, defines, ifdefs, or anything precede with a '#'. Besides the enumeration, it only contains the "list" class declaration and the "list" class member function definitions.
Generally speaking it should not, however it may be possible for there to be conflicting definitions of symbols or preprocessor macros that end up confusing the compiler. Try to narrow down the size of the problem by removing pieces and includes from the conflicting header until you can see what is causing it.
In response to the error messages you posted, the symbol NULL is often implemented as a preprocessor macro for the number 0. This is so that you can easily use it as a null pointer. Therefore this:
list(const T& NULL);
Could be converted into this syntax error by the preprocessor:
list(const T& 0);
Change the name of the parameter to something other than NULL.
Note that here:
Line 14: list(const T& NULL); (A constructor for "list" class)
NULL is the name of standard macro - when a standard header file is included before list_dec.h it will most likely cause NULL to be defined which will in turn cause your code to look something like this to the compiler:
list(const T& 0);
The constant 0 above makes the line ill-formed C++. You might get more information by instructing your compiler to produce preprocessed output file.
Presumably list_dec.h is running into a macro that's defined in those other headers (or some headers they in turn include) -- hard to say which one without seeing the first error message and the relevant part of list_dec.h!
The actual errors would give a more specific clue, bt it means there's something in your include file that is screwing up the scan for the next one. The most common thing would be some kind of unclude #-directive, like a #if missing its #endif.
If the errors are random in nature, it could be a missing semi colon. The compiler will usually halt on that, but on occasion you get "lucky".
Otherwise, conflicting names or defines. Do you have anything named std for example?