1

I'm trying to check if a default constructor exists for a template argument. I want to do something like this:

template <typename A>
class Blah
{
   Blah() { A* = new A(); } 
}

But i want to detect at compile time via SFINAE or some other trick if that constructor exists, and raise a static_assert of my own if it doesn't.

The problem arises when i have classes (like std::vector) that dont have a "default constructor" but a constructor with default parameters.

So using std::has_trivial_default_constructor won't return true. Although i can use new vector<T>().

3
  • 3
    Won't std::is_default_constructible still work then?
    – chris
    Dec 9, 2012 at 10:09
  • Doesn't exist in VS2010 ... And besides it's defined to return true if there's a default constructor. Which vector for example doesn't have, but can be constructed with no parameters. Dec 9, 2012 at 10:12
  • 6
    Having all default parameters still makes it a default constructor. GCC 4.7.2 says std::vector is default-constructible.
    – chris
    Dec 9, 2012 at 10:14

2 Answers 2

6

Here's a possible implementation of the type trait:

template<typename T>
class is_default_constructible {

    typedef char yes;
    typedef struct { char arr[2]; } no;

    template<typename U>
    static decltype(U(), yes()) test(int);

    template<typename>
    static no test(...);

public:

    static const bool value = sizeof(test<T>(0)) == sizeof(yes);
};

struct foo {
    foo(int) {}
};

int main()
{
    std::cout << is_default_constructible<foo>::value << '\n'        // 0
              << is_default_constructible<std::vector<int>>::value;  // 1
}
3
  • Great, how does the decltype() work exactly to get the SFINAE here ? Dec 9, 2012 at 11:59
  • Comma operator on the 2 operands.. right. Dec 9, 2012 at 12:40
  • 1
    That's right, it's called expression sfinae - right operand gives us the type we want and the left one is there for substitution to fail if the expression wouldn't be valid.
    – jrok
    Dec 9, 2012 at 13:43
4

There is no std::has_trivial_default_constructor in the C++ standard; this appears to be a gcc enhancement that came from Boost. This is not what you want. You don't want to check if something has a trivial default constructor; you want to check if some class has a default constructor, trivial or not. Use std::is_default_constructible (assuming a c++11 compliant-compiler).

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