Assume the following code:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
namespace X
{
class A{};
void f(A a){}
void g(int a){}
}
int main()
{
X::A a;
f(a);
g(5);
}
When I compile the code, the following compile error occurs:
main.cpp: In function 'int main()':
main.cpp: error: 'g' was not declared in this scope
So the function f
is compiled perfectly, but g
isn't. How? Both of them belong to the same namespace. Does the compiler deduce that function f
belongs to the X
namespace from the argument of type X::A
? How does compiler behave in such cases?
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