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Home/ Questions/Q 8153299
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T15:58:19+00:00 2026-06-06T15:58:19+00:00

Here is my somewhat odd code: template <typename T&> class A { public: void

  • 0

Here is my somewhat odd code:

template <typename T&>
class A {  
public:  
  void b(typename std::enable_if<!std::is_pointer<T>::value, T>;::type o) {}  
  void b(typename std::enable_if<std::is_pointer<T>::value, T>;::type o) {}  
};  

template <typename T>  
void b(typename std::enable_if<!std::is_pointer<T>::value, T>::type o) {}  
template <typename T>  
void b(typename std::enable_if<std::is_pointer<T>::value, T>::type o) {}  

If I ifdef out the method b and call b<int *>(pi) where pi is int *, everything compiles.

If I ifdef out the function b (outside class) and call A<int *> a; a.b(pi), I get the following error:

error: no type named 'type' in 'std::__1::enable_if<false, int *>'

Why the inconsistency and how can I fix the problem so that I can use the methods in A?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T15:58:20+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 3:58 pm

    The problem is, that SFINAE only works during overload resolution and only if the function itself is a template. In your method case, the whole class is a template, meaning that there is no substitution of the template parameter (remember: SFINAE == “Substitution Failure Is Not An Error”).

    At the point of instantiation, the method signatures look like this (nevermind the call to them):

    void A<int*>::b(std::enable_if<false, int*>::type o) // error
    void A<int*>::b(std::enable_if<true, int*>::type o)
    

    To fix this, make the methods templates too:

    template<class T>
    class A{
    public:
      template<class U>
      void b(U o, typename std::enable_if<!std::is_pointer<U>::value>::type* = 0){}
      // same for the other version
    };
    

    On a side note, letting the template argument get deduced is the better way to use SFINAE, so you should modify the free functions to look like this:

    template<class T>
    void b(T o, typename std::enable_if<!std::is_pointer<T>::value>::type* = 0){}
    // same for the other version
    

    In C++11, you can even use the template parameters for SFINAE:

    template<class T, EnableIf<std::is_pointer<T>> = {}>
    void b(T o);
    

    Utilizing an alias from the blog entry linked from here:

    namespace detail{ enum class enabler{}; }
    
    template<class Cond, class T = detail::enabler>
    using EnableIf = typename std::enable_if<C::value, T>::type;
    
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