Is there a default hash function for an unordered_set of a custom class?

If you don't specify your own hash functor as template argument, it will default to std::hash<MyClass>, which does not exist unless you define it.

Best define your own specialization of std::hash inside namespace std:

namespace std {
  template <>
  struct hash<MyClass>
  {
    typedef MyClass      argument_type;
    typedef std::size_t  result_type;

    result_type operator()(const MyClass & t) const
    {
       /* ..calculate hash value for t */
    }
  };
}

And make sure you include this code before the declaration of your hash. This way you can declare the hash simply as std::unordered_set<MyClass> with no need for further template arguments.

You didn't specify what MyClass looks like inside, but a typical situation is that your user-defined type simply consists of several simple-type members, for which a default hash function exists. In this case, you will probably want to combine the hash values for the individual types to a hash value for the entire combination. The Boost library provides a function called hash_combine for this purpose. Of course, there is no guarantee that it will work well in your particular case (it depends on the distribution of data values and the likelihood of collisions), but it provides a good and easy-to-use starting point.

Here is an example of how to use it, assuming MyClass consists of two string members:

#include <unordered_set>
#include <boost/functional/hash.hpp>

struct MyClass
{
  std::string _s1;
  std::string _s2;
};

namespace std {
  template <>
  struct hash<MyClass>
  {
    typedef MyClass      argument_type;
    typedef std::size_t  result_type;

    result_type operator()(const MyClass & t) const
    {
      std::size_t val { 0 };
      boost::hash_combine(val,t._s1);
      boost::hash_combine(val,t._s2);
      return val;
    }
  };
}

int main()
{
  std::unordered_set<MyClass> s;
  /* ... */
  return 0;
}

I'd like to expand on the answer given by jogojapan. As mentioned in a comment by CashCow on that answer, you also have to either overload the equality comparison operator (operator==) for MyClass or define a separate comparison function and provide it to the unordered_set. Otherwise, you will get another error message. For example, VS 2013 throws:

error C2678: binary '==' : no operator found which takes a left-hand operand of type 'const MyClass' (or there is no acceptable conversion)

Moreover, you can use lambda expressions instead of defining the hash and comparison functions. If you don't want to use Boost, then you can also handcraft a hash function. I understand, that you want to use some default function, but a compiler doesn't know how to calculate a meaningful hash for a custom class. However, you can use std::hash for the members of your class. If you put everything together, then your code could be written as follows:

class MyClass {
public:
    int i;
    double d;
    std::string s;
};

int main() {
    auto hash = [](const MyClass& mc){
        return (std::hash<int>()(mc.i) * 31 + std::hash<double>()(mc.d)) * 31 + std::hash<std::string>()(mc.s);
    };
    auto equal = [](const MyClass& mc1, const MyClass& mc2){
        return mc1.i == mc2.i && mc1.d == mc2.d && mc1.s == mc2.s;
    };
    std::unordered_set<MyClass, decltype(hash), decltype(equal)> mySet(8, hash, equal);

    return 0;
}

Code on Ideone