2

I have a class A which contains a templated member B whose exact type should be deduced from A's constructor. The way this is supposed to work is that, as shown in the below example, B can be instantiated with either 1 or 2 parameters to its constructor (deduction guide will tell) but will take a const char* in any case. When I instantiate A with the const char* argument for the constructor, an object B should be instantiated from the const char* as A only takes a B object. However, this is how far I get:

#include <iostream>

template <bool LengthOpt>
struct B
{
    B(const char*) { }

    B(const char*, size_t) {  }

    void print() {
        if constexpr (LengthOpt) {
            std::cout << "LengthOpt is set" << std::endl;
        }
    }
};

B(const char*) -> B<false>;
B(const char*, size_t) -> B<true>;


template <template <bool LengthOpt> class T>
struct A
{
    A(T is) : is_{is} {
        
    }

    void print() {
        is_.print();
    }

    T is_;
};

int main()
{
    A a("hello");

    a.print();
}

And it yields those errors:

<source>:24:7: error: use of template template parameter 'T' requires template arguments; argument deduction not allowed in function prototype
    A(T is) : is_{is} {
      ^
<source>:21:43: note: template is declared here
template <template <bool LengthOpt> class T>
                                          ^
<source>:32:5: error: use of template template parameter 'T' requires template arguments; argument deduction not allowed in non-static struct member
    T is_;
    ^
<source>:21:43: note: template is declared here
template <template <bool LengthOpt> class T>
                                          ^
<source>:37:7: error: no viable constructor or deduction guide for deduction of template arguments of 'A'
    A a("hello");
      ^
<source>:22:8: note: candidate template ignored: could not match 'A<T>' against 'const char *'
struct A
       ^
<source>:22:8: note: candidate function template not viable: requires 0 arguments, but 1 was provided

My take on the problem is that the compiler doesn't know that I want to instantiate an object B in A's constructor, as the template template argument specifies nothing. It could very well be just any object that takes one template parameter.

I'm scratching my head right now on how to resolve this. Is it even possible or am I scratching a limitation in C++ again?

11
  • 2
    T is a template not a type. You need not use a template template parameter to make A use some intstantiation of B. Jun 2, 2022 at 9:11
  • If A only takes B, it would be a good idea to reflect it in the template, as it stands now, you allow any template template parameter for T, not just B. Maybe template<typename T> class A{ A(B<T> arg); };?
    – Quimby
    Jun 2, 2022 at 9:13
  • Why not provide extra constructor+deduction guide? godbolt.org/z/ThhsGjdzc
    – alagner
    Jun 2, 2022 at 9:20
  • @463035818_is_not_a_number You're right, but I would still have to deduce the specialization of B somehow. I figured it doesn't really work as overload resolution is only considered AFTER template instantiation is done.
    – glades
    Jun 3, 2022 at 8:59
  • @Quimby: I tried that but then B<T> can't be deduced
    – glades
    Jun 3, 2022 at 9:00

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.