someone already asked this question, but the thread ended up with the original question not getting answered.
suppose you have this:
template<size_t i, class f_type>
void call_with_i(f_type f);
functor_type is either:
a) a struct with a method that has the following signature:
template<size_t i> operator()() const;
or, b) a function that looks like this:
template<size_t i> foo();
I want "call_with_i<42>(foo)" to be equivalent to "foo<42>()", but I can't figure out the right syntax to make that happen. I'd be satified with a solution that does just (a) but (a)+(b) would be great. I've already tried these syntaxes:
f< i >(); // doesn't work
f()< i >; // doesn't work
f.operator< i >(); // doesn't work
f.operator()< i >; // doesn't work
f.operator()< i >(); // works on msvc, but doesn't work on gcc.
How do you invoke operator() with explicit template arguments? Is there a way to invoke it in a way that the same syntax would also call a templated free function?
p.s. If you're wondering what i'm using this for, its because I'm writing a function repeat_to where repeat_to<10>(f) invokes f(0) then f(1) ... f(10). I'm using this to iterate through multiple boost::fusion vectors in parallel by index. yeah, i could use iterators, or i could just use a named member function, but i still want to know the answer.
edit note: i striked out stuff because passing a templated free function as an arg doesn't make any sense.