I read about enumeration declaration in C++ using cppreference.
Then I have made Enum class and check whether it is a class type or not using std:
enum class
is not a class
definition - the combination of keywords is used to define a scoped enumeration, which is a completely separate entity from a class
.
std::is_class
correctly returns false
here. If you use std::is_enum
, it will return true
.
From the Standard:
The enumeration type declared with an enum-key of only
enum
is an unscoped enumeration, and its enumerators are unscoped enumerators. The enum-keysenum class
andenum struct
are semantically equivalent; an enumeration type declared with one of these is a scoped enumeration, and its enumerators are scoped enumerators.
There is no mention of an enum class
being a "class
type" anywhere in the Standard.
Despite the class
keyword, enumerations are not classes. That keyword only means the enumerators must respect certain scoping rules (and also prevents implicit integral conversions).
The choice of the keyword is due to the aspects brought about by the new type1, and how scoped enumerators were hacked together in the pre-C++11 era, to obtain said aspects:
struct Enum { // could just as well be a class.
enum {
red = 1, blue, green
};
};
Which only allowed the enumerators to be accessed via the qualified name. Though it didn't prevent implicit conversions like true scoped enumerations do.
is_class
is meant to identify the class/struct aggregate types.
1 B. Stroustrup - C++11 FAQ