C++ attribute: deprecated (since C++14)
Indicates that the name or entity declared with this attribute is deprecated , that is, the use is allowed, but discouraged for some reason.
Contents |
Syntax
[
[
deprecated
]
]
|
(1) | ||||||||
[
[
deprecated
(
string-literal
)
]
]
|
(2) | ||||||||
| string-literal | - | an unevaluated string literal that could be used to explain the rationale for deprecation and/or to suggest a replacing entity |
Explanation
Indicates that the use of the name or entity declared with this attribute is allowed, but discouraged for some reason. Compilers typically issue warnings on such uses. The string-literal , if specified, is usually included in the warnings.
This attribute is allowed in declarations of the following names or entities:
- class/struct/union , e.g., struct [ [ deprecated ] ] S ; ,
- typedef-name , including those declared by alias declaration , e.g.,
-
- [ [ deprecated ] ] typedef S * PS ; ,
- using PS [ [ deprecated ] ] = S * ; ,
- (non-member) variable, e.g., [ [ deprecated ] ] int x ; ,
- static data member , e.g., struct S { [ [ deprecated ] ] static constexpr char CR { 13 } ; } ; ,
- non-static data member , e.g., union U { [ [ deprecated ] ] int n ; } ; ,
- function , e.g., [ [ deprecated ] ] void f ( ) ; ,
- namespace , e.g., namespace [ [ deprecated ] ] NS { int x ; } ,
- enumeration , e.g., enum [ [ deprecated ] ] E { } ; ,
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(since C++17) |
- template specialization , e.g., template <> struct [ [ deprecated ] ] X < int > { } ; .
A name declared non-deprecated may be redeclared deprecated. A name declared deprecated cannot be un-deprecated by redeclaring it without this attribute.
Example
#include <iostream> [[deprecated]] void TriassicPeriod() { std::clog << "Triassic Period: [251.9 - 208.5] million years ago.\n"; } [[deprecated("Use NeogenePeriod() instead.")]] void JurassicPeriod() { std::clog << "Jurassic Period: [201.3 - 152.1] million years ago.\n"; } [[deprecated("Use calcSomethingDifferently(int).")]] int calcSomething(int x) { return x * 2; } int main() { TriassicPeriod(); JurassicPeriod(); }
Possible output:
Triassic Period: [251.9 - 208.5] million years ago.
Jurassic Period: [201.3 - 152.1] million years ago.
main.cpp:20:5: warning: 'TriassicPeriod' is deprecated [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
TriassicPeriod();
^
main.cpp:3:3: note: 'TriassicPeriod' has been explicitly marked deprecated here
[[deprecated]]
^
main.cpp:21:5: warning: 'JurassicPeriod' is deprecated: Use NeogenePeriod() instead ⮠
[-Wdeprecated-declarations]
JurassicPeriod();
^
main.cpp:8:3: note: 'JurassicPeriod' has been explicitly marked deprecated here
[[deprecated("Use NeogenePeriod() instead")]]
^
2 warnings generated.
References
- C++23 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2024):
-
- 9.12.5 Deprecated attribute [dcl.attr.deprecated]
- C++20 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2020):
-
- 9.12.4 Deprecated attribute [dcl.attr.deprecated]
- C++17 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2017):
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- 10.6.4 Deprecated attribute [dcl.attr.deprecated]
- C++14 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2014):
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- 7.6.5 Deprecated attribute [dcl.attr.deprecated]
See also
|
C documentation
for
deprecated
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