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Home/ Questions/Q 7725051
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T04:50:33+00:00 2026-06-01T04:50:33+00:00

template <bool, class t, class u>// why is bool here,class booltype=bool. Are they equivalent?

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template <bool, class t, class u>// why is bool here,class booltype=bool. Are they equivalent?
struct if_
{
    typedef typename t type;
};

template<class t, class u>
struct if_<false,  t,  u>   // what does the <false,t,u> mean?   
{
    typedef typename u type;
};

The code if from an article named “name the template parameter “. I can’t understand the definition of the both struct.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T04:50:34+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 4:50 am

    EDIT: Moved the most important part first:

    if_<true, int, double>::type;  // this is int
    if_<false, int, double>::type; // this is double
    

    This conveniently defines a type that can conditionally be defined at compile-time.

    Old Answer:

    template <bool, class t, class u>// why is bool here,class booltype=bool. Are they equivalent?
    struct if_
    {
        typedef typename t type;
    };
    

    This means the first parameter passed to the template is a bool.

    It’s not equivalent to class booltype=bool. That would be a default typename for the template.

    template<class t, class u>
    struct if_<false,  t,  u>   // what does the <false,t,u> mean?   
    {
        typedef typename u type;
    };
    

    This is a specialization of your struct. If the first parameter passed to the template is false, this it what the struct is defined as.

    Basically, assume:

    if_<true, int, double> x;
    //is defined as
    //struct if_
    //{
    //    typedef int type;
    //};
    

    and

    if_<false, int, double> x;
    //is defined as
    //struct if_
    //{
    //    typedef double type;
    //};
    

    The notation basically tells what to typedef – if the first parameter is true, typedef the second parameter, otherwise the third.

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