I can't find this question answered in any other place, so I finally decided to ask. I have a C++ templated class that includes a casting operator to the type of one of the arguments:
template <class E, class B>
class bar {
private:
B innerVal_;
[...]
public:
/* Casting to the type of the 2nd template argument */
operator B() const { return innerVal_; }; // default implementation provided
};
However, I need to provide a specialization of this casting operator for some specific template arguments, for instance:
template<>
bar<concreteType,int>::operator int() // <-- whoops, error!
{ [...] }
The thing is that, no matter how I specify the syntax of the casting operator, gcc consistently returns me an error referred to the declaration of the function. The most common one is:
error: template-id ‘operator int<>’ for ‘bar< concreteType, int>::operator int()’ does not match any template declaration.
Which I got with these lines:
- Defining the casting operator as "operator int()"
- Using "operator typeB()", after declaring in the original template a line "typedef B typeB;"
I also played around with the "typename" keyword, with template brackets, and made some other desperate attempts. All of them result in bizarre errors --that I'm not going even to paste here.
Am I losing some obvious detail? Do you have any hint/pointer for me? Any help will be useful.