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Home/ Questions/Q 742757
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T08:47:04+00:00 2026-05-14T08:47:04+00:00

This code compiles in CodeGear 2009 and Visual Studio 2010 but not gcc. Why?

  • 0

This code compiles in CodeGear 2009 and Visual Studio 2010 but not gcc. Why?

class Foo
{
public:
    operator int() const;

    template <typename T> T get() const { return this->operator T(); }
};

Foo::operator int() const
{
    return 5;
}

The error message is:

test.cpp: In member function `T Foo::get() const’:
test.cpp:6: error: ‘const class Foo’ has no member named ‘operator T’

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T08:47:04+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:47 am

    It’s a bug in G++. operator T is an unqualified dependent name (because it has T in it and lookup will thus be different depending on its type). As such it has to be looked up when instantiating. The Standard rules

    Two names are the same if

    • …
    • they are the names of user-defined conversion functions formed with the same type.

    Thus the type name specified after the operator keyword doesn’t have to match lexically in any way. You can apply the following work-around to force GCC treating it as a dependent name

    template<typename T, typename>
    struct identity { typedef T type; };
    
    class Foo
    {
    public:
        operator int() const;
    
        template <typename T> T get() const { 
          return this->identity<Foo, T>::type::operator T(); 
        }
    };
    
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