Jumping to Visual Studio 2015 from Visual Studio 2013, I've noticed some differences in how static self-instances in managed C++ classes are accepted by the compiler. Consider these two examples:
Method 1:
public ref class CResourceManager
{
public:
static property CResourceManager^ Instance
{
CResourceManager^ get() { return %m_Instance; }
}
private:
static CResourceManager m_Instance;
};
Method 2:
public ref class CResourceManager
{
public:
static property CResourceManager^ Instance
{
CResourceManager^ get() { return m_Instance; }
}
private:
static CResourceManager^ m_Instance = gcnew CResourceManager;
};
Method 1 used to work on 2013, but it's failing to compile on 2015. I unfortunately do not have the exact compiler error handy, but it was one of those "Missing semicolon before variable name" errors, basically saying it couldn't find the type CResourceManager
(pointing to the static variable declaration).
So on to my questions:
- Is method 1 supposed to work or be valid in managed C++?
- Why would the second method work in 2015, but not the first (i.e. what are the differences)?
- Which method is the proper way to accomplish the end goal?