As brought up in the post https://www.reddit.com/r/cpp/comments/40lm8o/lambdas_are_dangerous/ with lambdas in inline functions you can run into ODR violations and thus undefined behavior.
There is also a stack overflow discussion at http://stackoverflow.com/questions/34717823/does-using-lambda-in-header-file-violate-odr
While, the ultimate fix may rely with the Core Working Group, I think here is a work around.
The basis for the trick come from Paul Fultz II in a post about constexpr lambda. You can find the post at http://pfultz2.com/blog/2014/09/02/static-lambda/
Here is some problematic code from the stackoverflow discussion. The lambda may have a different type across translation units and thus result in different specializations of for_each being called for different translation units resulting in ODR violations and thus undefined behavior.
Here is a simple fix that will prevent the ODR violation.
We create a static const constexpr null pointer with the type of a lambda. If lambdas are different types across different translation units then odr_helper will have different types across different translation units. Because g now is a template function using the type of odr_helper, g will be a different specialization across different translation units and thus will not result in an odr violation.
Also note that because T is defaulted, g can be used without any changes from before.
ideone at https://ideone.com/NdBpXN
There is also a stack overflow discussion at http://stackoverflow.com/questions/34717823/does-using-lambda-in-header-file-violate-odr
While, the ultimate fix may rely with the Core Working Group, I think here is a work around.
The basis for the trick come from Paul Fultz II in a post about constexpr lambda. You can find the post at http://pfultz2.com/blog/2014/09/02/static-lambda/
Here is some problematic code from the stackoverflow discussion. The lambda may have a different type across translation units and thus result in different specializations of for_each being called for different translation units resulting in ODR violations and thus undefined behavior.
1 2 3 4 | inline void g() { int arr[2] = {}; std::for_each(arr, arr+2, [] (int i) {std::cout << i << ' ';}); } |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 | // Based on Richard Smith trick for constexpr lambda // via Paul Fultz II (http://pfultz2.com/blog/2014/09/02/static-lambda/) template<typename T> auto addr(T &&t) { return &t; } static const constexpr auto odr_helper = true ? nullptr : addr([](){}); template <class T = decltype(odr_helper)> inline void g() { int arr[2] = {}; std::for_each(arr, arr+2, [] (int i) {std::cout << i << ' ';}); } |
Also note that because T is defaulted, g can be used without any changes from before.
ideone at https://ideone.com/NdBpXN
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