问题
Given the following code:
#include <iostream>
template <std::size_t N>
struct foo
{ static std::size_t value; };
template <>
std::size_t foo<0>::value = 0u;
template <size_t N>
std::size_t foo<N>::value = 1u + foo<N - 1u>::value;
int main()
{
std::cout
<< foo<3u>::value << ' '
<< foo<2u>::value << ' '
<< foo<1u>::value << ' '
<< foo<0u>::value << std::endl;
}
where the static member value
of the template struct foo
is recursively initialized, I get different outputs from g++:
3 2 1 0
and from clang++:
1 1 1 0
So seem that g++ initializes foo<N>::value
recursively using the initialized value of foo<N-1u>::value
where clang++ uses zero for foo<N-1u>::value
.
Two questions:
- is the preceding code legit or is it Undefined Behavior in some way?
- if the preceding code is legit, who's right: g++ or clang++?
回答1:
It is unspecified. Both compilers are right.
Here are the relevant pieces from cppreference "initialization".
Static initialization
For all other non-local static and thread-local variables, Zero initialization takes place
So for all these variables, they are zero when the program loads. Then:
Dynamic initialization
After all static initialization is completed, dynamic initialization of non-local variables occurs in the following situations:
1) Unordered dynamic initialization, which applies only to (static/thread-local) class template static data members and ... that aren't explicitly specialized.
And these variables match the criteria. And then it says:
Initialization of such static variables is indeterminately sequenced with respect to all other dynamic initialization ....
Which means that any sequence of initialization is fine. Both compilers are correct.
To avoid the issue use constexpr
to force a "constant initialization" instead.
回答2:
It is Unspecified.
You are using a construct where you reference a variable definition onto itself - perhaps somewhat analogue to saying int i = i-1
. In clang case, it is just using the generic template definition
template <std::size_t N>
struct foo
{ static std::size_t value; };//without specialization this will be ZERO initialized
because it hasn't seen 'itself' like normal template class or function would (as opposed to gcc case).
To sum up:
1) Legit
2) Unspecified
To avoid issues use constexpr and specialize the class template instead.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/54981973/g-and-clang-different-behaviour-with-recursive-initialization-of-a-static-me