A most vexing parse error: constructor with no arguments

I was compiling a C++ program in Cygwin using g++ and I had a class whose constructor had no arguments. I had the lines:

MyClass myObj();
myObj.function1();

And when trying to compile it, I got the message:

error: request for member 'function1' in 'myObj', which is of non-class type 'MyClass ()()'

After a little research, I found that the fix was to change that first line to

MyClass myObj;

I could swear I've done empty constructor declarations with parentheses in C++ before. Is this probably a limitation of the compiler I'm using or does the language standard really say don't use parentheses for a constructor without arguments?


Solution 1:

Although MyClass myObj(); could be parsed as an object definition with an empty initializer or a function declaration the language standard specifies that the ambiguity is always resolved in favour of the function declaration. An empty parentheses initializer is allowed in other contexts e.g. in a new expression or constructing a value-initialized temporary.

Solution 2:

This is called the Most Vexing Parse issue. When the parser sees

MyClass myObj();

It thinks you are declaring a function called myObj that has no parameters and returns a MyClass.

To get around it, use:

MyClass myObj;

Solution 3:

I found this in the C++ standard (§8.5.8):

An object whose initializer is an empty set of parentheses, i.e., (), shall be value-initialized.

[Note: since () is not permitted by the syntax for initializer,

X a ();

is not the declaration of an object of class X, but the declaration of a function taking no argument and returning an X. The form () is permitted in certain other initialization contexts (5.3.4, 5.2.3, 12.6.2). —end note ]

Solution 4:

This is a fairly well-known issue and isn't compiler dependent. Essentially, you were declaring a function returning type MyObj. Not surprisingly, you couldn't call its constructor. See the C++ faq lite for a good explanation.