class A {
public:
A();
private:
pthread_mutex_t mu;
};
A::A()
{
mu = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; //cannot compile
}
Ca
Even if we change this to use an initializer list in the constructor it still fails:
#include
struct foo {
pthread_mutex_t test;
foo() : test(PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER) {}
};
int main() {
foo f;
}
We can see why it fails and an only be used for initialisation in a few contexts by looking at the output from the pre-processsor:
struct foo {
pthread_mutex_t test;
foo() : test({ { 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, { 0 } } }) {}
};
It's not legal to use nested braces for initialisation like that in C++03, but what's more interesting perhaps is that C++11 makes this syntax and usage perfectly legal.
In your original code we can see a few more things:
A::A()
{
const pthread_mutex_t test = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; // initialization - fine
mu = test; // assignment - fine
mu = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER; // assignment - C++11 only
}