How to initialize const member variable in a class?

Chaitanya picture Chaitanya · Jan 24, 2013 · Viewed 293.7k times · Source
#include <iostream>

using namespace std;
class T1
{
  const int t = 100;
  public:

  T1()
  {

    cout << "T1 constructor: " << t << endl;
  }
};

When I am trying to initialize the const member variable t with 100. But it's giving me the following error:

test.cpp:21: error: ISO C++ forbids initialization of member ‘t’
test.cpp:21: error: making ‘t’ static

How can I initialize a const value?

Answer

Dinkar Thakur picture Dinkar Thakur · Jan 24, 2013

The const variable specifies whether a variable is modifiable or not. The constant value assigned will be used each time the variable is referenced. The value assigned cannot be modified during program execution.

Bjarne Stroustrup's explanation sums it up briefly:

A class is typically declared in a header file and a header file is typically included into many translation units. However, to avoid complicated linker rules, C++ requires that every object has a unique definition. That rule would be broken if C++ allowed in-class definition of entities that needed to be stored in memory as objects.

A const variable has to be declared within the class, but it cannot be defined in it. We need to define the const variable outside the class.

T1() : t( 100 ){}

Here the assignment t = 100 happens in initializer list, much before the class initilization occurs.