Consider the function:
template<typename T>
void printme(T&& t) {
for (auto i : t)
std::cout << i;
}
or any other function that expects one parameter with a begin()/end() – enabled type.
Why is the following illegal?
printme({'a', 'b', 'c'});
When all these are legitimate:
printme(std::vector<char>({'a', 'b', 'c'}));
printme(std::string("abc"));
printme(std::array<char, 3> {'a', 'b', 'c'});
We can even write this:
const auto il = {'a', 'b', 'c'};
printme(il);
or
printme<std::initializer_list<char>>({'a', 'b', 'c'});
Your first line
printme({'a', 'b', 'c'})is illegal because the template argumentTcould not be inferred. If you explicitly specify the template argument it will work, e.g.printme<vector<char>>({'a', 'b', 'c'})orprintme<initializer_list<char>>({'a', 'b', 'c'}).The other ones you listed are legal because the argument has a well-defined type, so the template argument
Tcan be deduced just fine.Your snippet with
autoalso works becauseilis considered to be of typestd::initializer_list<char>, and therefore the template argument toprintme()can be deduced.The only "funny" part here is that
autowill pick the typestd::initializer_list<char>but the template argument will not. This is because § 14.8.2.5/5 of the C++11 standard explicitly states that this is a non-deduced context for a template argument:However with
auto, § 7.1.6.4/6 has explicit support forstd::initializer_list<>