The code is:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
// compares two objects
template <typename T> void compare(const T&, const T&){
cout<<"T"<<endl;
};
// compares elements in two sequences
template <class U, class V> void compare(U, U, V){
cout<<"UV"<<endl;
};
// plain functions to handle C-style character strings
void compare(const char*, const char*){
cout<<"ordinary"<<endl;
};
int main() {
cout<<"-------------------------char* --------------------------"<< endl;
char* c="a";
char* d="b";
compare(c,d);
cout<<"------------------------- char [2]---------------------------"<< endl;
char e[]= "a";
char f[]="b";
compare(e,f);
system("pause");
}
The result is:
————————-char* ————————–
T
————————- char [2]———————–
ordinary
And my question is:
Why does compare(c,d) call compare(const T&, const T&) and compare(e,f) call the ordinary function even though the arguments of the two functions are char*s?
It appears that VS2005 may be erroneously treating the
eandfvariables asconst char *types.Consider the following code:
which outputs:
Section
13.3 Overload resolutionof C++03 (section numbers appear to be unchanged in C++11 so the same comments apply there) specifies how to select which function is used and I’ll try to explain it in (relatively) simple terms, given that the standard is rather a dry read.Basically, a list of candidate functions is built based on how the function is actually being called (as a member function of an class/object, regular (unadorned) function calls, calls via a pointer and so on).
Then, out of those, a list of viable functions is extracted based on argument counts.
Then, from the viable functions, the best fit function is selected based on the idea of a minimal implicit conversion sequence (see
13.3.3 Best viable functionof C++03).In essence, there is a “cost” for selecting a function from the viable list that is set based on the implicit conversions required for each argument. The cost of selecting the function is the sum of the costs for each individual argument to that function, and the compiler will chose the function with the minimal cost.
If two functions are found with the same cost, the standard states the the compiler should treat it as an error.
So, if you have a function where an implicit conversion happens to one argument, it will be preferred over one where two arguments have to be converted in that same way.
The “cost” can be see in the table below in the Rank column. An exact match has less cost than promotion, which has less cost than conversion.
In places where the conversion cost is identical for functions
F1andF2(such as in your case),F1is considered better if:However, that’s not the whole story since the template code and non-template code are all exact matches hence you would expect to see the non-template function called in all cases rather than just the third.
That’s covered further on in the standard: The answer lies in section
13.3.3.2 Ranking implicit conversion sequences. That section states that an identical rank would result in ambiguity except under certain conditions, one of which is:The conversions for the template version are actually a proper subset (qualification conversion) of the non-template version (qualification AND array-to-pointer conversions), and proper subsets are deemed to have a lower cost.
Hence it prefers the template version in the first two cases. In the third case, the only conversions are array-to-pointer for the non-template version and qualification for the template version, hence there’s no subset in either direction, and it prefers the non-template version based on the rule I mentioned above, under the ranking table).