The function accepts an array by reference, and because of this, type of element T and size S is deduced by the compiler. So it returns S which is nothing but the size of the array. In the absence of reference, it would decay into a pointer type. So there is no difference between these:
void f(int v[100]); //declaration of f
void f(int v[200]); //redeclaration of f
void f(int v[]); //redeclaration of f
void f(int *v); //redeclaration of f
All are exactly same. You can pass array of any size to all of these functions.
Coming back to ArraySize, the returned value of this function cannot be used as constant expression:
int a[10];
SomeClassTemplate<ArraySize(a)> obj; //error
See error : http://ideone.com/4mdJE
So a better implementation would be this:
template <typename T,unsigned S>
char (&ArraySizeHelper(const T (&v)[S]))[S]; //no need to define it!
#define ArraySize(a) sizeof(ArraySizeHelper(a))
Now this is perfectly fine:
int a[10];
SomeClassTemplate<ArraySize(a)> obj; //ok
See ok : http://ideone.com/Zt3UY