Unnamed/anonymous namespaces vs. static functions
- by Head Geek
A little-used feature of C++ is the ability to create anonymous namespaces, like so:
namespace {
int cannotAccessOutsideThisFile() { ... }
} // namespace
You would think that such a feature would be useless -- since you can't specify the name of the namespace, it's impossible to access anything within it from outside. But these unnamed namespaces are accessible within the file they're created in, as if you had an implicit using-clause to them.
My question is, why or when would this be preferable to using static functions? Or are they essentially two ways of doing the exact same thing?