Suppose I have a unique_ptr
member object that I want to initialize in-class, see the code below. Why do I have to use uniform initialization (curly braces)? The second declaration spits an error, something like
so.cpp:10:31: error: expected parameter declarator
std::unique_ptr<Foo> upf2(new Foo);
^
so.cpp:10:31: error: expected ')'
so.cpp:10:30: note: to match this '('
std::unique_ptr<Foo> upf2(new Foo); ^
2 errors generated.
And I don't think is a most vexing parse issue, at least I don't believe so.
#include <memory>
class Foo
{
};
class Bar{
std::unique_ptr<Foo> upf1{new Foo}; // works fine
// std::unique_ptr<Foo> upf2(new Foo); // error here
};
int main()
{
Bar bar;
}
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