For example:
include/flatbuffers/reflection.h:365:8: error: definition of implicit copy
constructor for 'pointer_inside_vector<flatbuffers::Table, unsigned char>'
is deprecated because it has a user-declared copy assignment operator
[-Werror,-Wdeprecated-copy]
void operator=(const pointer_inside_vector &piv);
^
It's unclear why the old code wanted to declare a public `operator=`
without defining it; that just seems like a misunderstanding of the C++03 idiom
for deleting a member function. And anyway, we don't *want* to delete the
assignment operator; these are polymorphic types that do not follow value
semantics and nobody should ever be trying to copy them. So the simplest fix
is just to go back to the Rule of Zero: remove the declaration of `operator=`
and let the compiler do what it wanted to do originally anyway.
"The best code is no code."
Also, update the generated .h files.
Fixes#5649.
* Added basic schema evolution tests
* Add BUILD targets for evolution tests. Added to test/generate_code scripts
* Use vector.front() instead of vector.data()
* Added --scoped-enums option for evolution test