I read this question, but it still doesn't make a lot of sense to me. It still sounds more like a sugarcoating feature.
What's the difference between:
class A
{
// public/private ?
A (const A&) = delete;
};
and
class A
{
private:
A (const A&); // MISSING implementation
};
Same for operator=
or other functions.
One difference is that =delete
allows for compile-time errors while in some cases the declaration without a definition is only caught at link-time (at which the error message is typically not pointing you to the source of the problem). One such case is when you add a member function that tries to copy an instance of A
. Even when it's not a member function of A
, the error message about the copy-ctor being private
is not as clear as using =delete
.
To avoid confusion, I'd recommend you make the deleted function public
as otherwise you will get additional and misleading error messages.