class C {
using namespace std; // error
};
namespace N {
using namespace std; // ok
}
int main () {
using namespace std; // ok
}
Edit: Want to know motivation behind it.
I don't know exactly, but my guess is that allowing this at class scope could cause confusion:
namespace Hello
{
typedef int World;
}
class Blah
{
using namespace Hello;
public:
World DoSomething();
}
//Should this be just World or Hello::World ?
World Blah::DoSomething()
{
//Is the using namespace valid in here?
}
Since there is no obvious way of doing this, the standard just says you can't.
Now, the reason this is less confusing when we're talking namespace scopes:
namespace Hello
{
typedef int World;
}
namespace Other
{
using namespace Hello;
World DoSomething();
}
//We are outside of any namespace, so we have to fully qualify everything. Therefore either of these are correct:
//Hello was imported into Other, so everything that was in Hello is also in Other. Therefore this is okay:
Other::World Other::DoSomething()
{
//We're outside of a namespace; obviously the using namespace doesn't apply here.
//EDIT: Apparently I was wrong about that... see comments.
}
//The original type was Hello::World, so this is okay too.
Hello::World Other::DoSomething()
{
//Ditto
}
namespace Other
{
//namespace Hello has been imported into Other, and we are inside Other, so therefore we never need to qualify anything from Hello.
//Therefore this is unambiguiously right
World DoSomething()
{
//We're inside the namespace, obviously the using namespace does apply here.
}
}