This c++-faq question covers the most-vexing-parse. According to wikipedia, the term was coined by Scott Meyers in Effective STL. Pedants will say that the "most vexing parse" refers to a specific form of ambiguity resolution of the form:
std::ifstream ifs("file.txt");
std::vector<T> v(std::istream_iterator<T>(ifs), std::istream_iterator<T>());
And not:
MyObject object(); // error
It's defined formally in §6.8 Ambiguity Resolution of the C++ standard(s). There is no mention of the "most vexing parse"1. But it's popularly used to refer to any form of syntactic ambiguity where an expression-statement is interpreted as a declaration.
I don't know the history of Default constructor with empty brackets, but judging from the revision history I suspect this happened:
The most-vexing-parse tag was created somewhere around 2009. The tag wiki uses a correct example of the "most vexing parse".
The answerer calls it the "most vexing parse" and the question is retroactively tagged.
Because the question is useful/popular, it was tagged as an FAQ 3 years later.
The title could use some reworking as well as it's hopelessly vague.
I can currently think of 3 approaches:
Don't do anything, pedants will be pedants and the nomenclature reflects the usage.
Clean up the FAQ question.
Create a new FAQ question that specifically addresses §6.8, so that we have a canonical question and not confusing scattered bits and pieces.
Then perhaps a new tag could be created, something like ambiguity-resolution and questions that don't specifically address the "most vexing parse" could be retagged.
1 It should probably be called the "arbitrarily vexing parse" or "ambiguously vexing parse" instead.
object-construction
or something if you really need a tag (and I honestly don't know why you do). There's nothing particularly vexing about it besides people failing to learn the language's basic syntax.MyObject object();
there is no ambiguity in the grammar at all, which doesn't permit using()
as an initializer in this context.