Question

I recently came across some weird looking class that had three constructors:

class Class
{
    public:
        explicit Class(int );

        Class(AnotherClass );

        explicit Class(YetAnotherClass, AnotherClass );

    // ...
}

This doesn't really make sense to me - I thought the explicit keyword is to protect compiler chosen construction from a foreign type.

Is this allowed? If it it, what does it mean?

Was it helpful?

Solution

In C++11 multi-parameter constructors can be implicitly converted to with brace initialization.

However, before C++11 explicit only applied to single-argument constructors. For multiple-argument constructors, it was ignored and had no effect.

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