Condividi tramite


Compiler Error C3767

 

The latest version of this topic can be found at Compiler Error C3767.

function' candidate function(s) not accessible

A friend function defined in a class is not supposed to be treated as if it were defined and declared in the global namespace scope. It can, however, be found by argument-dependent lookup.

C3767 may also be caused by a breaking change: native types are now private by default in a /clr compilation; see Type visibility for more information.

The following sample generates C3767:

// C3767a.cpp  
// compile with: /clr  
using namespace System;  
public delegate void TestDel();  
  
public ref class MyClass {  
public:  
   static event TestDel^ MyClass_Event;  
};  
  
public ref class MyClass2 : public MyClass {  
public:  
   void Test() {  
      MyClass^ patient = gcnew MyClass;  
      patient->MyClass_Event();  
    }  
};  
  
int main() {  
   MyClass^ x = gcnew MyClass;  
   x->MyClass_Event();   // C3767  
  
   // OK  
   MyClass2^ y = gcnew MyClass2();  
   y->Test();  
};  

The following sample generates C3767:

// C3767b.cpp  
// compile with: /clr:oldSyntax  
using namespace System;  
__delegate void TestDel();  
  
public __gc class MyClass {  
public:  
   static __event TestDel * MyClass_Event;  
};  
  
public __gc class MyClass2 : public MyClass {  
public:  
   void Test() {  
      MyClass* patient = new MyClass;  
      patient->MyClass_Event();  
    }  
};  
  
int main() {  
   MyClass* x = new MyClass;  
   x->MyClass_Event();   // C3767  
  
   // OK  
   MyClass2 * y = new MyClass2();  
   y->Test();  
};  

The following sample generates C3767:

// C3767c.cpp  
// compile with: /clr /c  
  
ref class Base  {  
protected:  
   void Method() {  
      System::Console::WriteLine("protected");  
   }  
};  
  
ref class Der : public Base {  
   void Method() {  
      ((Base^)this)->Method();   // C3767  
      // try the following line instead  
      // Base::Method();  
   }  
};  

The following sample generates C3767:

// C3767d.cpp  
// compile with: /clr:oldSyntax /c  
  
__gc class Base {  
protected:  
   void Method() {  
      System::Console::WriteLine("protected");  
   }  
};  
  
__gc class Der : public Base {  
   void Method() {  
      ((Base*)this)->Method();   // C3767  
      // try the following line instead  
      // Base::Method();  
   }  
};  

In Visual C++ .NET 2002, the compiler changed the way it looked up symbols. In some cases, it would have automatically looked for symbols in a specified namespace. Now, it will use argument-dependent lookup.

The following sample generates C3767:

// C3767e.cpp  
namespace N {  
   class C {  
      friend void FriendFunc() {}  
      friend void AnotherFriendFunc(C* c) {}  
   };  
}  
  
int main() {  
   using namespace N;  
   FriendFunc();   // C3767 error  
   C* pC = new C();  
   AnotherFriendFunc(pC);   // found via argument-dependent lookup  
}  

For code that is valid in Visual C++ .NET 2003 and Visual C++ .NET 2002, declare the friend in class scope and define it in namespace scope:

// C3767f.cpp  
class MyClass {  
   int m_private;  
   friend void func
();  
};  
  
void func
() {  
   MyClass s;  
   s.m_private = 0;  
}  
  
int main() {  
   func
();  
}