This doesn't compile:
template<class X> struct A {
template<int I> void f() {}
};
template<class T> void g()
{
A<T> a;
a.f<3>(); // Compila开发者_Go百科tion fails here (Line 18)
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
g<int>(); // Line 23
}
The compiler (gcc) says:
hhh.cpp: In function 'void g()':
hhh.cpp:18: error: expected primary-expression before ')' token
hhh.cpp: In function 'void g() [with T = int]':
hhh.cpp:23: instantiated from here
hhh.cpp:18: error: invalid use of member (did you forget the '&' ?)
Can anyone explain why this is? Is there a way to get it to work?
Try the following code:
template<class T> void g()
{
A<T> a;
a.template f<3>(); // add `template` keyword here
}
According to C++'03 Standard 14.2/4:
When the name of a member template specialization appears after
.
or->
in a postfix-expression, or after nested-name-specifier in a qualified-id, and the postfix-expression or qualified-id explicitly depends on a template-parameter (14.6.2), the member template name must be prefixed by the keywordtemplate
. Otherwise the name is assumed to name a non-template.
Future C++ Standard seems to be still require this keyword according to draft n2857 14.3/4. Some compilers has special mode that allows to compile original code without errors (Comeau compiles it in so called relaxed mode).
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