typedef bool (*my_function_f)(int, double);
typedef bool (__stdcall *my_function_f2)(int, double);
// ^^^^^^^^^
template<class F> class TFunction;
template<class R, class T0, class T1>
class TFunction<R(*)(T0,T1)>
{
typedef R (*func_type)(T0,T1);
};
int main()
{
TFunction<my_function_f> t1; // works on x64 and win32
TFunction<my_function_f2> t2; // works on x64 and doesn't work on win32
return 0;
}
The code above gives me the following error in Visual C++ 2010:
1>e:\project\orwell\head\multimapwizard\trunk\externals.cpp(49): error C2079: 't2' uses undefined class 'Externals::TFunction<F>'
1> with
1> [
1> F=Externals::my_function_f2
1> ]
As you can see the problem with __stdcall modifier. Is this the compiler bug?
No, this is by design. The calling convention is very much part of the function declaration, your template function uses the default calling convention. Which is not __stdcall unless you compile with /Gz. The default is /Gd, __cdecl.
The code compiles when you target x64 because it blissfully has only one calling convention.
Fix: