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Home/ Questions/Q 703779
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T03:52:07+00:00 2026-05-14T03:52:07+00:00

The following code #include <stdio.h> template <typename T, T v> class Tem { T

  • 0

The following code

#include <stdio.h>
template <typename T, T v> class Tem
{
    T t;
    Tem()
    {
        t = v;
    }
};

typedef Tem<FILE*,NULL> TemFile;

when compiled in a .mm file (Objective C++) by Xcode on MacOS X, throws the following error:

error: could not convert template argument ‘0’ to ‘FILE*’.

What’s going on, please? The code in question compiled fine under MSVC. Since when is the 0 constant not a valid pointer to anything? Is this an artifact of Objective C++ (as opposed to vanilla C++)?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T03:52:08+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:52 am

    According to the standard, you are out of luck. There is no way to initialize a pointer argument to anything besides the address-of a global. §14.3.2/1:

    A template-argument for a non-type,
    non-template template-parameter shall
    be one of:

    • an integral constant-expression of integral or enumeration type; or
    • the name of a non-type template-parameter; or
    • the address of an object or function with external linkage, including
      function templates and function
      template-ids but excluding non-static
      class members, expressed as &
      id-expression where the & is optional

      if the name refers to a function or
      array, or if the corresponding
      template-parameter is a reference; or
    • a pointer to member expressed as described in 5.3.1 .

    §14.3.2/5:

    • for a non-type template-parameter of
      type pointer to object, qualification
      conversions (4.4) and the
      array-to-pointer conversion (4.2) are
      applied. [Note: In particular, neither
      the null pointer conversion (4.10) nor
      the derived-to-base conversion (4.10)
      are applied. Although 0 is a valid
      template-argument for a non-type
      template-parameter of integral type,
      it is not a valid template-argument
      for a non-type template-parameter of
      pointer type. ]

    However, Comeau accepts this invalid workaround:

    typedef Tem<FILE*, (FILE *) NULL > TemFile;
    

    And this code has a slim chance of compliance: I can’t find where the standard specifically says that a default expression is used verbatim in place of a a missing argument, and I can’t find a matching known defect. Anyone have a reference?

    #include <stdio.h>
    template <typename T, T *v = (T*) 0> class Tem
    {
        T t;
        Tem()
        {
            t = v;
        }
    };
    
    typedef Tem<FILE> TemFile;
    

    For more portability, you might consider creating a bogus FILE FILE_NULL;, pass &FILE_NULL, and test for pointer-equality with that instead of zero.

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