I don’t understand why the array decays to a pointer in a template function.
If you look at the following code: When the parameter is forced to be a reference (function f1) it does not decay. In the other function f it decays. Why is the type of T in function f not const char (buff&)[3] but rather const char* (if I understand it correctly)?
#include <iostream>
template <class T>
void f(T buff) {
std::cout << "f:buff size:" << sizeof(buff) << std::endl; //prints 4
}
template <class T>
void f1(T& buff) {
std::cout << "f:buff size:" << sizeof(buff) << std::endl; //prints 3
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
const char buff[3] = {0,0,0};
std::cout << "buff size:" << sizeof(buff) << std::endl; //prints 3
f(buff);
f1(buff);
return 0;
}
Because arrays can not be passed by value as a function parameter.
When you pass them by value they decay into a pointer.
In this function:
T can not be
char (&buff)[3]as this is a reference. The compiler would have triedchar (buff)[3]to pass by value but that is not allowed. So to make it work arrays decay to pointers.Your second function works because here the array is passed by reference: