If you go to the accepted answer of this post
Could someone please elaborate on why he uses:
double temp = ::atof(num.c_str());
and
::
is the scope resolution operator. Its use in this scenario, as a unary operator, is to ensure that the name (atof) is always looked up in the global scope -- this can be useful to prevent name hiding from interfering with the lookup.
It says use the global version, not one declared in local scope. So if someone's declared an atof
in your class, this'll be sure to use the global one.
Have a look at Wikipedia on this subject:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int n = 12; // A global variable
int main() {
int n = 13; // A local variable
cout << ::n << endl; // Print the global variable: 12
cout << n << endl; // Print the local variable: 13
}
Lets say you have two versions of a function f()
one defined outside a namespace and one defined inside. Now lets say you have one more function g()
in the same namespace. Now if you do f()
inside g()
it will call the one defined in the same namespace. But if you want to call the global version you need to do ::f()
The :: operator is scope resolution operator.
when used with class specifier as like A::a, it is to access the data memeber a of the class A. when used without any specifier, it access the global variable.
It is used mainly in the following contests.
::func()
means that this function is not affiliated with any specific class. It is used when there exist many functions with the same name, and to avoid confusion between the one you want and specific member functions you precede the function name with the scope operator.
From C++ Primer, 4th edition, section 17.2.1:
"Names defined at global scope - names declared outside any class, function, or namespace - are defined inside the global namespace. The global namespace is implicitly declared and exists in every program. Each file that defines entities at global scope adds those names to the global namespace.
The scope operator can be used to refer to members of the global namespace. Because the global namespace is implicit, it does not have a name; the notation
::member_name
refers to a member of the global namespace."