Pregunta

Inside the header file of my class, I am trying the following and getting compiler complaints:

private:
    static const double some_double= 1.0;

How are you supposed to actually do this?

¿Fue útil?

Solución

In C++11, you can have non-integral constant expressions thanks to constexpr:

private:
    static constexpr double some_double = 1.0;

Otros consejos

Declare it in the header, and initialize it in one compilation unit (the .cpp for the class is sensible).

//my_class.hpp
private:
static const double some_double;

//my_class.cpp
const double my_class::some_double = 1.0;

I've worked around this issue by doing this:

//my_class.hpp
const double my_double() const {return 0.12345;}

//in use
double some_double = my_class::my_double();

I got the idea from

math::pi()
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