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Home/ Questions/Q 3498976
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T12:33:18+00:00 2026-05-18T12:33:18+00:00

Is there any performance advantage to be had when using template parameters with static

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Is there any performance advantage to be had when using template parameters with static member functions instead of functor-style predicates??

For instance, a functor-style sort interface is typically something like this:

template <typename _Type, typename _Pred>
void sort (
    RandomAccessIterator first,
    RandomAccessIterator last ,
    _Pred less_than
    )
{
// actual sorting code here, calling less_than()...
}

You could do something more like this, and require that _Pred contained a static member function _Pred::less_than:

template <typename _Type, typename _Pred>
void sort (
    RandomAccessIterator first,
    RandomAccessIterator last
    )
{
// actual sorting code here, calling _Pred::less_than()...
}

In theory, the first case might dynamically create a temporary functor object on the heap, whereas I believe that the second case is fully evaluated at compile time. I understand that (say) gcc and/or msvc are good at optimising, but can this be done to the same degree in the first case??

Also, I’m not trying to rewrite the STL sort routines or anything like that, just an example for a more general functor question…

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T12:33:19+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 12:33 pm

    Normal use of sort won’t put anything on the heap, for the simple reason that nobody calls malloc or new. If your predicate causes a call to malloc or new, either in its constructor or in the comparison, then you only have yourself to blame…

    It’s plausible that some stack will be used for the parameter of type _Pred (you must not call a template parameter _Pred in your code, because _Pred is a reserved symbol. It can be called that in the implementation of std::sort). But there won’t be any associated work to do, beyond what’s necessary for any data members that the predicate object might have. If the predicate has no data members then the optimizer will have a field day, and if it does have data members then a static member function wouldn’t support what the user wants to do.

    As long as operator() in the predicate is non-virtual, the compiler can inline it into the instantiation of sort if it can see the definition and if it feels that’s best. Of course there are no guarantees what’s faster, but there’s no reason to suppose that a call to a static member function is any faster or slower than a call to a non-virtual non-static member function, nor that it’s any easier or harder to inline.

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