1

The following code has error about the number of arguments for transform(). There are two versions of transform(), one takes four arguments and another takes five. Why the compiler is trying to use the second version? By the way, I am using VS2008

template<class T> T same(const T& t){ return t; }

template<class In, class Out>
Out my_copy(In first, In last, Out res){

    return transform(first, last, res, same);
}

void test(){
    int a[]={1,2,3,4,5,6};
    vector<int> v(a,a+sizeof(a)/sizeof(int));
    vector<int> v2(v.size());
    my_copy(v.begin(), v.end(), v2.begin());
}


// error C2780: '::std::_Enable_if<!std::_Is_checked_iterator<_OutIt>::_Result||!std::_Is_checked_iterator<_OutIt>::_Result,_OutIt>::_Result std::transform(_InIt1,_InIt1,_InIt2,_OutIt,_Fn2)' : expects 5 arguments - 4 provided
3
  • 1
    Why don't you just use std::copy?
    – K-ballo
    Nov 4, 2011 at 23:10
  • It's an example from Stroustrup's book, just want to try it.
    – ubbdd
    Nov 4, 2011 at 23:15
  • The example is wrong then, same is not a valid anything.
    – K-ballo
    Nov 4, 2011 at 23:17

1 Answer 1

3

Because same is not a valid UnaryOperator, since its a template function. You want something like this instead:

&same< typename iterator_traits< Out >::value_type >

Note the & is optional

Or you could make same into a polymorphic function object:

struct same
{
    template< typename T >
    T operator ()( T const& t ) const { return t; }
};

and use same() as the UnaryOperator.

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