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Home/ Questions/Q 8211433
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T10:25:33+00:00 2026-06-07T10:25:33+00:00

The Standard says that std::tuple has the following member functions constexpr tuple(); explicit tuple(const

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The Standard says that std::tuple has the following member functions

constexpr tuple();
explicit tuple(const Types&...);

Can someone please explain what is supposed to happen for std::tuple<>?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T10:25:34+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 10:25 am

    I believe this is a minor error in the standard. Clearly, when the Types parameter pack is empty, the two constructor calls are equivalent and cannot be overloaded (see C++11 section 13). (Further note that the constructor using Types is not a member template either –if it was, then it would be a legal overload.).

    In other words, this code will not compile:

    template <typename... Types>
    struct Test
    {
      constexpr Test() {}
      explicit Test(Types const&...) { /* etc. */ }
    };
    
    int main()
    {
      Test<> a;
      Test<int> b;
    }
    

    e.g., a g++ v4.8 snapshot outputs:

    tt.cxx: In instantiation of ‘struct Test<>’:
    tt.cxx:10:10:   required from here
    tt.cxx:5:12: error: ‘Test<Types>::Test(const Types& ...) [with Types = {}]’ cannot be overloaded
       explicit Test(Types const&...) { /* etc. */ }
                ^
    tt.cxx:4:13: error: with ‘constexpr Test<Types>::Test() [with Types = {}]’
       constexpr Test() {}
                 ^
    

    This can be fixed by using partial specialization:

    template <typename... Types>
    struct Test
    {
      constexpr Test() {} // default construct all elements
      explicit Test(Types const&...) { /* etc. */ }
      // and all other member definitions
    };
    
    template <>
    struct Test<>
    {
      constexpr Test() {}
      // and any other member definitions that make sense with no types
    };
    
    int main()
    {
      Test<> a;
      Test<int> b;
    }
    

    which will compile correctly.

    It appears the standard wanted a constexpr default constructor was so that std::tuple<> var; could be written instead of writing std::tuple<> var(); or std::tuple<> var{}; because of the use of explicit with the other constructor. Unfortunately, its definition of std::tuple does not work for tuples of size zero. The standard does permit such in section 20.4.2.7 (relational operators) though, “For any two zero-length tuples, […]”. Oops! 🙂

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