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Home/ Questions/Q 763843
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T16:37:35+00:00 2026-05-14T16:37:35+00:00

In Visual Studio 2008, the compiler cannot resolve the call to SetCustomer in _tmain

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In Visual Studio 2008, the compiler cannot resolve the call to SetCustomer in _tmain below and make it unambiguous:

template <typename TConsumer>
struct Producer
{
    void SetConsumer(TConsumer* consumer) { consumer_ = consumer; }

    TConsumer* consumer_;
};

struct AppleConsumer
{
};

struct MeatConsumer
{
};

struct ShillyShallyProducer : public Producer<AppleConsumer>,
                              public Producer<MeatConsumer>
{
};

int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
{
    ShillyShallyProducer producer;
    AppleConsumer consumer;
    producer.SetConsumer(&consumer);   //  <--- Ambiguous call!!

    return 0;
}

This is the compilation error:

// error C2385: ambiguous access of 'SetConsumer'
//    could be the 'SetConsumer' in base 'Producer<AppleConsumer>'
//    or could be the 'SetConsumer' in base 'Producer<MeatConsumer>'

I thought the template argument lookup mechanism would be smart enough to deduce the correct base Producer. Why isn’t it?

I could get around this by changing Producer to

template <typename TConsumer>
struct Producer
{
    template <typename TConsumer2>
    void SetConsumer(TConsumer2* consumer) { consumer_ = consumer; }

    TConsumer* consumer_;
};

and call SetConsumer as

    producer.SetConsumer<AppleConsumer>(&consumer);   // Unambiguous call!!

but it would be nicer if I didn’t have to…

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T16:37:35+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 4:37 pm

    I thought the template argument lookup mechanism would be smart enough to deduce the correct base Producer.

    This hasn’t to do with templates, it comes from using multiple base classes – the name lookup is already ambiguous and overload resolution only takes place after that.

    A simplified example would be the following:

    struct A { void f()    {} };
    struct B { void f(int) {} };
    struct C : A, B {};
    
    C c;
    c.f(1); // ambiguous
    

    Workarounds are explicitly qualifying the call or to introduce the functions into the derived classes scope:

     struct ShillyShallyProducer : public Producer<AppleConsumer>,
                                   public Producer<MeatConsumer>
     {
         using Producer<AppleConsumer>::SetConsumer;
         using Producer<MeatConsumer >::SetConsumer;
     };
    
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