I have a class templated with typename T
. It contains a function,
template <typename T, size_t a>
myClass<T,a> operator+(myClass<T,a> lhs, const T& rhs) {
return lhs += rhs;
}
myClass<T,a> myClass<T,a>::operator+=(const T& rhs) {
// Do addition, depends on 'a'.
return *this;
}
When I call this with, for example
myClass<double, 2> myObj_double_2(constructor args);
myObj_double_2 = myObj_double_2 + 5.2;
I have no problem.
If I however call
myObj_double_2 = myObj_double_2 + 5;
Then the compiler gives me a message like - No match for 'operator+' (operand types are 'myClass<double, 2ul>' and 'int'). Candidates are ... note: deduced conflicting types for parameter 'const T' ('double' and 'int')
.
Can I write the code in some way to allow additional types to be passed that have a conversion to T
(since, for example, double(5) is a valid constructor call)?
myObj_double_2 = myObj_double_2 + 5.0;
void foo(double);
and then callingfoo(3)
is perfectly legal, as far as I can tell, and does the same thing asfoo((double)3)
orfoo(3.0)
. So the issue here is more subtle.