The following code compiles in MSVC++, but does not compile in GCC 4.5.1:
#include <iostream>
template< typename PT, bool pB >
struct TA
{
PT m;
TA( PT fT ) :
m( fT )
{
std::cout << "TA<" << pB << ">::TA() : " << m << std::endl;
}
PT operator()( PT fT )
{
std::cout << "TA<" << pB << ">::() : " << m << " and " << fT << std::endl;
return ( m );
}
};
template< typename PT >
PT Foo( PT fT )
{
std::cout << "Foo() : " << fT << std::endl;
return ( fT );
}
// Does not compile in GCC 4.5.1, compiles in MSVC++2010.
// Substitute TA< decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) ), pB > with
// TA< double, pB > to compile with GCC.
template< bool pB, typename PF, typename PP >
auto Func( PF fF, PP && fP, TA< decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) ), pB > && fA )
-> decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) )
{
decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) ) lResult( fF( std::forward< PP >( fP ) ) );
fA( lResult );
return ( lResult );
}
int main( void )
{
Func< true >( Foo< double >, -1.2, 2.1 );
return ( 0 );
}
The comment points to the problematic line and shows the fix (which is not really a fix from design point of view, just a compilation fix). Few questions:
Is MSVC++ correct to compile this?
If we were to change parameters' order in
auto Func( PF fF, PP && fP, TA< decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) ), pB > && fA )
to
auto Func( PF fF, TA< decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) ), pB > && fA, PP && fP )
it would not compile, since compiler treats fP in TA< decltype( fF( std::forward<PP>( fP ) ) ), pB > as undeclared variable. Logically, does compiler really need to know fP at this point, does it not parse the whole declaration anyway, since it's function with trailing return-type? Why can it not "skip" second function parameter and see if fP is declared in function declaration later? Or I'm missing something fundamental here (perhaps, some paragraph from the Standard)?