Why does the following give no compilation error?:
// T.h
template<class T> class X
{
public:
void foo(int a = 42);
};
// Main.cpp
#include "T.h"
#include <iostream>
template<class T> void X<T>::foo(int a = 13)
{
std::cout << a << std::endl;
}
int main()
{
X<int> x;
x.foo(); // prints 42
}
It seems as though the 13 is just silently ignored by the compiler. Why is this?
The cooky thing is that if the class template definition is in Main.cpp instead of a header file, I do indeed get the default parameter redefinition error.
Now I know the compiler will complain about this if it were just an ordinary (non-template) function.
What does the standard have to say about default parameters in class template member functions or function templates?
template<class T> class x{....};. If so then you're saying that replacing the include directive with this template class definition produces a different compiler message? That suggests that there is something else in the header file i.e. try copying the entire contents of the header file into where the include directive was and presumably then you get no compiler warning? – Troubadour Mar 19 '10 at 19:20