g++ external reference error
-
05-07-2019 - |
Question
I have issue that is reproduced on g++. VC++ doesn't meet any problems. So I have 2 cpp files:
1.cpp:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
extern const std::string QWERTY;
int main()
{
std::cout << QWERTY.c_str() << std::endl;
}
2.cpp:
#include <string>
const std::string QWERTY("qwerty");
No magic, I just want place string constants into separated file. At link time ld produces an error: "undefined reference to `_QWERTY'" The first think to wrap both declarations into "extern "C"" - didn't help. Error and non c++ _QWERTY is still there.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions
Solution
It looks like you are probably running into this bit of the standard:
In C, a const-qualified object at file scope without an explicit storage class specifier has external linkage. In C++, it has internal linkage.
Make this change to 2.cpp:
#include <string>
extern const std::string QWERTY("qwerty");
There is some more detail on what "linkage" means in this question - What is external linkage and internal linkage in C++.
OTHER TIPS
I'd have to look it up but I think const global variables have internal linkage in C++, don't use const
and it'll compile fine.
1.cpp
...
extern std::string QWERTY;
...
2.cpp
#include <string>
std::string QWERTY("qwerty");
Or you could declare/define it as a const string in a common header of course.
Adding a superfluous extern
to the 2.cpp will get it to compile too, but I'm not sure that's standard or some g++ 'extra'