inline function members inside a class

but how about inline methods inside a class ?

Both syntaxes for inlining functions (using explicit inline and defining member-function inside class definition) provides only hint about inlining for compiler. From performance point of view, they are equal.

In case of defining a member-function inside a class declaration, the readability of the latter should be of your main concern: it really hurts to litter class interface with multiple line of implementation details. So avoid doing that if your member-function is more than one statement: return stuff or simple forwarding should be OK, but usually no more than that.

class MyClass
{
public:
    int f() const { return m_i; }
    int g() const;

private:
    int m_i;
};

inline int MyClass::g() const
{
    return m_i;
}

// both member-functions behave equally (except for naming)

Leave a Comment

Hata!: SQLSTATE[HY000] [1045] Access denied for user 'divattrend_liink'@'localhost' (using password: YES)