
Michael Marcin wrote:
At least under MSVC 8 I can do:
boost::array< boost::array<int,2>, 4 > foo = { -1,1, 0,0, 1,-1, 2,-2 }; or
int foo[4][2] = { {-1,1}, {0,0}, {1,-1}, {2,-2} };
or
boost::array<int,2> foo[4] = { {-1,1}, {0,0}, {1,-1}, {2,-2} };
but not
boost::array< boost::array<int,2>, 4 > foo = { {-1,1}, {0,0}, {1,-1}, {2,-2} };
just wondering why this is the case.
To initialize a boost::array "by the book" you need double braces: boost::array<int,2> foo = {{ 1, 2 }}; because a boost::array<int, 2> is essentially struct array { int data[2]; }; and, according to the initializer rules, the outer braces are for the array struct, and the inner braces correspond to the data[] array. In most cases you can drop the outer braces. In your last example, however, dropping them creates an ambiguity, and you need: boost::array< boost::array<int,2>, 4 > foo = {{ {-1,1}, {0,0}, {1,-1}, {2,-2} }};