I understand the troubles you can get into when you put a using
declaration inside a header file, so I don't want to do that. Instead I tried to put the using
(or a namespace foo =
) within the class declaration, to cut down on repetitive typing within the header file. Unfortunately I get compiler errors. Seems like it would be a useful feature.
#ifndef FOO_H
#define FOO_H
// This include defines types in namespace gee::whiz::abc::def,
// such as the class Hello.
#include "file_from_another_namespace.h"
// using namespace gee::whiz::abc::def; // BAD!
namespace x {
namespace y {
namespace z {
struct Foo {
using namespace gee::whiz::abc::def; // Illegal.
namespace other = gee::whiz::abc::def; // Illegal.
// Foo(gee::whiz::abc::def::Hello &hello); // annoyingly long-winded
Foo(other::Hello &hello); // better
//...
};
} } } // end x::y::z namespace
#endif // FOO_H
In the real code, the namespace names are much longer and annoying and it's not something I can change.
Can anyone explain why this is not legal, or (better) if there's a workaround?
Could you do typedef gee::whiz::abc::def::Hello Hello
?