I am watching Scott Meyer's video "The Universal Reference/Overloading Collision Conundrum", where he gives an example of what not to do:
class MessedUp {
public:
template<typename T>
void doWork(const T& param) { std::cout << "doWork(const T& param)" << std::endl; }
template<typename T>
void doWork(T&& param) { std::cout << "doWork(T&& param)" << std::endl; }
};
.... //somewhere in the main
MessedUp m;
int w = 10;
const int cw = 20;
m.doWork(cw); // calls doWork(const T& param) as expected
m.doWork(std::move(cw)); // Calls doWork(T&& param)
I am curious as to why compiler chose doWork(T&& param)
rather than doWork(const T& param)
during Template Overload resolution. As far as I know, const
objects can't be moved.