3

Hi I'm trying to make my code compile under clang 3.2-9, here is a simplified sample of what I can't get to compile :

template<template <class>class Derived, typename Type>
class Foo
{
    public:
        Foo(){}
};

template<typename Type>
class Bar
    : public Foo<Bar, Type>
{
    public:
        Bar()
            : Foo<Bar, Type>()
        {}
};

int main()
{
    Bar<int> toto;
}

And here is the error that clang tells me :

test.cpp:14:19: error: template argument for template template parameter must be a class template
            : Foo<Bar, Type>()
                  ^
test.cpp:14:15: error: expected class member or base class name
            : Foo<Bar, Type>()
              ^
test.cpp:14:15: error: expected '{' or ','
3 errors generated.

It compiles without any problem under gcc 4.7.2. And I can't get the right syntax to make it work under clang. Can someone help me please, I'm kinda stuck ...

1 Answer 1

5

Just use the fully qualified name for your class template:

template<template <class> class Derived, typename Type>
class Foo
{
    public:
        Foo(){}
};

template<typename Type>
class Bar
    : public Foo<::Bar, Type>
//               ^^^^^
{
    public:
        Bar()
            : Foo<::Bar, Type>()
//                ^^^^^
        {}
};

int main()
{
    Bar<int> toto;
}

The problem is that inside Bar, the name Bar refers to the class itself, i.e to the instantiation of the Bar class template (i.e. Bar<Type>) rather than the template itself.

You can see this example compiling here.

5
  • Do you know if gcc should accept my version, or is it too permissive regarding the standard, or is clang right to trigger this error? (and if possible do you know which part of the standard talks about this issue?) Thanks
    – b3nj1
    Mar 6, 2013 at 11:01
  • @b3nj1: What version of GCC are you using?
    – Andy Prowl
    Mar 6, 2013 at 11:04
  • I use gcc 4.7.2. Oh and clang asks to have a space between <:: like this < ::
    – b3nj1
    Mar 6, 2013 at 11:04
  • @b3nj1: GCC 4.7.2 expects a space as well, but not GCC 4.8.0 (beta) nor Clang 3.2
    – Andy Prowl
    Mar 6, 2013 at 11:05
  • I think G++ is wrong to accept the original code. The relevant part of the standard is 9 [class]/2 which defines the injected-class-name. The space should not be required, but G++ 4.7 doesn't implement [lex.pptoken]/3 Mar 6, 2013 at 11:44

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