The following template specialization code

template<typename T1, typename T2>
void spec1()
{

}

Test case 1

template< typename T1> //compile error
void spec1<int>()
{

}

Test case 2

template< typename T2> //compile error
void spec1<int>()
{

}

generates a

error C2768: 'spec1' : illegal use of explicit template arguments compile error.

Does anyone know why?

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what platform/compiler are you using? – aaa90210 Sep 12 '09 at 22:57
I'm using Visual C++ 08 – jameszhao00 Sep 13 '09 at 1:23
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1 Answer

up vote 18 down vote accepted

Function templates cannot be partially specialised, only fully, i.e. like that:

template<>
void spec1<char, int>()
{

}

For why function templates cannot be partially specialised, you may want to read this.

When you specialise partially (only possible for classes), you'd have to do it like that:

template <typename T1>
class class1<T1, int>
{

};

so you have to list T1 again.

The way your specialisations are written, they would be ambiguous for spec1<int, int>.

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Ah so I can have partially specialized classes embedded with static functions? – jameszhao00 Sep 13 '09 at 1:24
Oh, i see the article you link to explains matters already. I removed my answer, since i found that forwarding to a class is more convenient for this case. In cases where T1 and T2 are used as types of the function parameters though, i find overloading much more readable, since it is just like normal function overloading then. – Johannes Schaub - litb Sep 13 '09 at 2:18
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