This program does not compile using clang++ test.cpp -std=c++0x:
class A
{
public:
A() {}
A(const A&) {}
A(A&&) {}
A& operator = (const A&) { return *this; }
A& operator = (A&&) { return *this; }
};
class B
{
A m_a;
public:
operator const A &() const
{
return m_a;
}
};
int main(int, char**)
{
A a;
B b;
a = b; // compile error
}
Compile errors:
Apple clang version 3.0 (tags/Apple/clang-211.10.1) (based on LLVM 3.0svn)
test.cpp:25:9: error: no viable conversion from 'B' to 'A'
a = b;
^
test.cpp:5:5: note: candidate constructor not viable: no known conversion from 'B' to
'const A &' for 1st argument
A(const A&) {}
^
test.cpp:6:5: note: candidate constructor not viable: no known conversion from 'B' to 'A &&'
for 1st argument
A(A&&) {}
^
test.cpp:15:5: note: candidate function
operator const A &() const
^
test.cpp:8:23: note: passing argument to parameter here
A& operator = (A&&) { return *this; }
^
Why does it not compile? Why does the compiler prefer A::operator = (A&&) over A::operator = (const A&)?
In addition, why would A a = b; compile while both A a; a = b; (the above program) and A a(b); do not?
clang version 3.0 (tags/RELEASE_30/final) Target: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu Thread model: posixand GCC 4.5.3 or 4.6.2 (but I have no idea if that is normal or not) – Mat Dec 30 '11 at 18:52