Default template arguments for function templates
Why are default template arguments only allowed on class templates? Why can't we define a default type in a member function template? For example:
struct mycclass {
template<class T=int>
void mymember(T* vec) {
// ...
}
};
Instead, C++ forces that default template arguments are only allowed on a class template.
Solution 1:
It makes sense to give default template arguments. For example you could create a sort function:
template<typename Iterator,
typename Comp = std::less<
typename std::iterator_traits<Iterator>::value_type> >
void sort(Iterator beg, Iterator end, Comp c = Comp()) {
...
}
C++0x introduces them to C++. See this defect report by Bjarne Stroustrup: Default Template Arguments for Function Templates and what he says
The prohibition of default template arguments for function templates is a misbegotten remnant of the time where freestanding functions were treated as second class citizens and required all template arguments to be deduced from the function arguments rather than specified.
The restriction seriously cramps programming style by unnecessarily making freestanding functions different from member functions, thus making it harder to write STL-style code.
Solution 2:
To quote C++ Templates: The Complete Guide (page 207):
When templates were originally added to the C++ language, explicit function template arguments were not a valid construct. Function template arguments always had to be deducible from the call expression. As a result, there seemed to be no compelling reason to allow default function template arguments because the default would always be overridden by the deduced value.
Solution 3:
So far, all the proffered examples of default template parameters for function templates can be done with overloads.
AraK:
struct S {
template <class R = int> R get_me_R() { return R(); }
};
could be:
struct S {
template <class R> R get_me_R() { return R(); }
int get_me_R() { return int(); }
};
My own:
template <int N = 1> int &increment(int &i) { i += N; return i; }
could be:
template <int N> int &increment(int &i) { i += N; return i; }
int &increment(int &i) { return increment<1>(i); }
litb:
template<typename Iterator, typename Comp = std::less<Iterator> >
void sort(Iterator beg, Iterator end, Comp c = Comp())
could be:
template<typename Iterator>
void sort(Iterator beg, Iterator end, std::less<Iterator> c = std::less<Iterator>())
template<typename Iterator, typename Comp >
void sort(Iterator beg, Iterator end, Comp c = Comp())
Stroustrup:
template <class T, class U = double>
void f(T t = 0, U u = 0);
Could be:
template <typename S, typename T> void f(S s = 0, T t = 0);
template <typename S> void f(S s = 0, double t = 0);
Which I proved with the following code:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <sstream>
#include <ctype.h>
template <typename T> T prettify(T t) { return t; }
std::string prettify(char c) {
std::stringstream ss;
if (isprint((unsigned char)c)) {
ss << "'" << c << "'";
} else {
ss << (int)c;
}
return ss.str();
}
template <typename S, typename T> void g(S s, T t){
std::cout << "f<" << typeid(S).name() << "," << typeid(T).name()
<< ">(" << s << "," << prettify(t) << ")\n";
}
template <typename S, typename T> void f(S s = 0, T t = 0){
g<S,T>(s,t);
}
template <typename S> void f(S s = 0, double t = 0) {
g<S,double>(s, t);
}
int main() {
f(1, 'c'); // f<int,char>(1,'c')
f(1); // f<int,double>(1,0)
// f(); // error: T cannot be deduced
f<int>(); // f<int,double>(0,0)
f<int,char>(); // f<int,char>(0,0)
}
The printed output matches the comments for each call to f, and the commented-out call fails to compile as expected.
So I suspect that default template parameters "aren't needed", but probably only in the same sense that default function arguments "aren't needed". As Stroustrup's defect report indicates, the addition of non-deduced parameters was too late for anyone to realise and/or really appreciate that it made defaults useful. So the current situation is in effect based on a version of function templates which was never standard.
Solution 4:
On Windows, with all versions of Visual Studio you can convert this error (C4519) to a warning or disable it like so:
#ifdef _MSC_VER
#pragma warning(1 : 4519) // convert error C4519 to warning
// #pragma warning(disable : 4519) // disable error C4519
#endif
See more details here.