The following code snippet:
struct a
{
[[nodiscard]] friend int b();
};
Produces this error when compiling on clang++ (trunk 342102) with -std=c++17:
<source>:3:5: error: an attribute list cannot appear here
[[nodiscard]] friend int b();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~
Removing friend or adding a body to b prevents the error.
g++ (trunk) compiles the code just fine.
Live example on godbolt: https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/ttTDuZ
Is this a clang++ bug? Or is there some rule in the Standard that makes this code ill-formed?
If clang++ is correct, what's the proper way of marking a friend member function as [[nodiscard]]?
Per [dcl.attr.grammar]/5
Each attribute-specifier-seq is said to appertain to some entity or statement, identified by the syntactic context where it appears ([stmt.stmt], [dcl.dcl], [dcl.decl]). If an attribute-specifier-seq that appertains to some entity or statement contains an attribute or alignment-specifier that is not allowed to apply to that entity or statement, the program is ill-formed. If an attribute-specifier-seq appertains to a friend declaration, that declaration shall be a definition. No attribute-specifier-seq shall appertain to an explicit instantiation.
emphasis mine
So, clang is right here. If you have an attribute, the function must have a definition if it is a friend function.
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