Issue
EDIT: this question is three years old, how can it be a duplicate of another one asked Yesterday???
I was under the impression that the following should become valid code under the new C++20 standard:
struct Foo
{
int a, b;
};
template<Foo>
struct Bar
{};
Bar<{.a=1, .b=2}> bar;
Yet, gcc 10.2.0
, with -std=c++20
set complains: could not convert ‘{1, 2}’ from ‘<brace-enclosed initializer list>’ to ‘Foo’
and Clang cannot compile this snippet either. Can someone point out why it is not well formed?
Solution
This template-argument
{.a=1, .b=2}
is not allowed according to the grammar for a template-argument which only allows the following constructs:
template-argument:
constant-expression
type-id
id-expression
A brace-init list is not any of the above constructs, it's actually an initializer and so it cannot be used as a template-argument.
You can be explicit about the type of the object that you use as the template-argument:
Bar<Foo{.a=1, .b=2}> bar;
and this will work, since this is a constant-expression.
Answered By - cigien Answer Checked By - Marie Seifert (WPSolving Admin)