>Submitter-Id: net-debian >Originator: Seth M LaForge >Organization: >Confidential: no >Synopsis: The 'using typename' construct won't compile >Severity: serious >Priority: medium >Category: c++ >Class: rejects-legal >Release: 3.0 20010526 (Debian prerelease) (Debian testing/unstable) >Environment: System: Linux burn 2.2.18 #1 Thu Dec 14 09:22:25 PST 2000 i686 unknown Architecture: i686
host: i386-pc-linux-gnu build: i386-pc-linux-gnu target: i386-pc-linux-gnu configured with: ../src/configure -v --enable-languages=c,c++,java,f77,proto,objc --prefix=/usr --infodir=/share/info --mandir=/share/man --enable-shared --with-gnu-as --with-gnu-ld --with-system-zlib --enable-long-long --enable-nls --without-x --without-included-gettext --disable-checking --enable-threads=posix --enable-java-gc=boehm --with-cpp-install-dir=bin --enable-objc-gc i386-linux >Description: C++ allows the word 'typename' after a 'using' directive. _The C++ Programming Language_ (third edition) [Stroustrup], section A.7 (Grammar/Declarations) defines the using directive: using-declaration: "using" "typename"(opt) "::"(opt) nested-name-specifier unqualified-id ";" >How-To-Repeat: Attempt to compile the following: struct C { typedef int INT; }; struct D : public C { using typename C::INT; }; int main() { D::INT x = 666; } The compiler complains: test.cc:6: parse error before `typename' >Fix: I'm not sure if there are cases in which the 'typename' portion is required. I've seen it in production code (the loki library, from _Modern C++ Design_ [Alexandrescu].