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I just came across std::tr1::extent template and it puzzled me. I never ever dealt with array type parameters in my life so I don't understand how they work. So, given the code from gcc type_traits

template<typename _Tp, unsigned _Uint, std::size_t _Size>
     struct extent<_Tp[_Size], _Uint>

template<typename _Tp, unsigned _Uint>
     struct extent<_Tp[], _Uint>

how does compiler chooses between those specializations? What type I should pass to extent to get it choose the second one?

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extent<int[], 0>::value == 0 // second one chosen

int[] is an incomplete type, the compiler doesn't know its sizeof value. The outermost dimension may stay incomplete, because it's not important for the array to function correctly in most contexts (in particular, indexing will still work). Something like int[1][] wouldn't be a correct type anymore.

extent<int[2], 0>::value == 2 // first one chosen

Sure this can be nested:

extent<int[][2], 0>::value == 0 // second one chosen, with `_Tp` being `int[2]`
extent<int[][2], 1>::value == 2 // second one chosen again
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So the second one will be chosen any time there's empty square brackets ([]) in the declaration? – vava Oct 22 at 10:49
Yes, indeed. That's because T[] doesn't match T[N]. – Johannes Schaub - litb Oct 22 at 10:55
Hm, looks like despite the logic, when extent<_Tp[_Size], _UInt> matches against extent<int[1][2]>, _Tp gets int[2] not int[1]. But (int [1])[2] seems to be so more intuitive... – vava Oct 22 at 11:08
You have to consider it as an "array of _Size _Tp", not as a pure textual replacement. The actual rule is more complicated. The rule is that in T d; if d is d1[N], and the type of T d1; is X T, then d has type X array of N T. Apply it for int i[1];: d is d1[1], and type of int i; is "int" (X is empty, T is int), d has type array of 1 int. And applying for int i[1][2];: d is d1[2]. Type of int i[1]; was array of 1 int so X is array of 1. Overall type is X array of 2 int = array of 1 array of 2 int. – Johannes Schaub - litb Oct 22 at 11:38

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