According to the C++ Primer book, the author mentioned that We can specify a class member function as a friend of another class, instead of the entire class (page 634).
Then, I tested this code:
class A
{
public:
friend void B::fB(A& a);
void fA(){}
};
class B
{
public:
void fB(A& a){};
void fB2(A& a){};
};
I just wanted the fB() to be friend of class A, not the entire class B. But the about code produced an error: 'B' : is not a class or namespace name
.
(I am using Visual C++ 2005)
Try putting the B definition before A's:
class A; // forward declaration of A needed by B
class B
{
public:
// if these require full definition of A, then put body in implementation file
void fB(A& a); // Note: no body, unlike original.
void fB2(A& a); // no body.
};
class A
{
public:
friend void B::fB(A& a);
void fA(){}
};
A
needs the full definition of B
. However, B
needs to know about A
, but does not need the full definition, so you need the forward declaration of A
.