Note: This is very similar to Determine number of bits in integral type at compile time, however this is a much simplified version, all contained in a single .cpp
Edit: Added a solution - although a correct explanation was given (and accepted) I found a way to solve the problem generically.
Problem
The problem is with functions like
msg(int32_t);
msg(int64_t);
a call like
long long myLong = 6;
msg(myLong); // Won't compile on gcc (4.6.3), call is ambiguous
This compiles on MSVC. Can anyone provide an explanation of why this fails on gcc (I'm assuming it's probably to do with the fact gcc is usually strictly standards compliant) and an example of how to correctly achieve the same effect?
#include <iostream>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <boost/integer.hpp>
using namespace std;
void msg(int v) { cout << "int: " << sizeof(int) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg(long v) { cout << "long: " << sizeof(long) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg(long long v) { cout << "long long: " << sizeof(long long) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(int32_t v) { cout << "int32_t: " << sizeof(int32_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(int64_t v) { cout << "int64_t: " << sizeof(int64_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(uint32_t v) { cout << "uint32_t: " << sizeof(uint32_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(uint64_t v) { cout << "uint64_t: " << sizeof(uint64_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
int main()
{
int myInt = -5;
long myLong = -6L;
long long myLongLong = -7LL;
unsigned int myUInt = 5;
unsigned int myULong = 6L;
unsigned long long myULongLong = 7LL;
msg(myInt);
msg(myLong);
msg(myLongLong);
msg2(myInt);
msg2(myLong); // fails on gcc 4.6.3 (32 bit)
msg2(myLongLong);
msg2(myUInt);
msg2(myULong); // fails on gcc 4.6.3 (32 bit)
msg2(myULongLong);
return 0;
}
// Output from MSVC (and gcc if you omit lines that would be commented out)
int: 4 5
long: 4 6
long long: 8 7
int32_t: 4 -5
int32_t: 4 -6 // omitted on gcc
int64_t: 8 -7
uint32_t: 4 5
uint32_t: 4 6 // omitted on gcc
uint64_t: 8 7
Solution
The solution is provide a function that successfully maps int
, long
and long long
to the appropriate int32_t
or int64_t
. This can be done trivially at run time via if (sizeof(int)==sizeof(int32_t))
type statements, but a compile-time solution is preferable. A compile-time solution is available via the use of boost::enable_if
.
The following works on MSVC10 and gcc 4.6.3. The solution could be further enhanced by disabling for non-integral types, but that is outside the scope of this problem.
#include <iostream>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <boost/integer.hpp>
#include <boost/utility/enable_if.hpp>
#include <boost/type_traits/is_signed.hpp>
#include <boost/type_traits/is_unsigned.hpp>
using namespace std;
template <class InputT>
typename boost::enable_if_c<sizeof(InputT)==sizeof(int32_t) && boost::is_signed<InputT>::value,
int32_t>::type ConvertIntegral(InputT z) { return static_cast<int32_t>(z); }
template <class InputT>
typename boost::enable_if_c<sizeof(InputT)==sizeof(int64_t) && boost::is_signed<InputT>::value,
int64_t>::type ConvertIntegral(InputT z) { return static_cast<int64_t>(z); }
template <class InputT>
typename boost::enable_if_c<sizeof(InputT)==sizeof(uint32_t) && boost::is_unsigned<InputT>::value,
uint32_t>::type ConvertIntegral(InputT z) { return static_cast<uint32_t>(z); }
template <class InputT>
typename boost::enable_if_c<sizeof(InputT)==sizeof(uint64_t) && boost::is_unsigned<InputT>::value,
uint64_t>::type ConvertIntegral(InputT z) { return static_cast<uint64_t>(z); }
void msg(int v) { cout << "int: " << sizeof(int) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg(long v) { cout << "long: " << sizeof(long) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg(long long v) { cout << "long long: " << sizeof(long long) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(int32_t v) { cout << "int32_t: " << sizeof(int32_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(int64_t v) { cout << "int64_t: " << sizeof(int64_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(uint32_t v) { cout << "uint32_t: " << sizeof(uint32_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
void msg2(uint64_t v) { cout << "uint64_t: " << sizeof(uint64_t) << ' ' << v << '\n'; }
int main()
{
int myInt = -5;
long myLong = -6L;
long long myLongLong = -7LL;
unsigned int myUInt = 5;
unsigned int myULong = 6L;
unsigned long long myULongLong = 7LL;
msg(myInt);
msg(myLong);
msg(myLongLong);
msg2(ConvertIntegral(myInt));
msg2(ConvertIntegral(myLong));
msg2(ConvertIntegral(myLongLong));
msg2(ConvertIntegral(myUInt));
msg2(ConvertIntegral(myULong));
msg2(ConvertIntegral(myULongLong));
return 0;
}
typedef _Longlong int64_t
and gcc hastypedef long long int int64_t
, so I think the type is the same in both cases. At any rate, it is the call using long that is the problem... – Zero May 14 '12 at 8:23