16 Overloading [over]

When two or more different declarations are specified for a single name in the same scope, that name is said to be overloaded. By extension, two declarations in the same scope that declare the same name but with different types are called overloaded declarations. Only function and function template declarations can be overloaded; variable and type declarations cannot be overloaded.

When an overloaded function name is used in a call, which overloaded function declaration is being referenced is determined by comparing the types of the arguments at the point of use with the types of the parameters in the overloaded declarations that are visible at the point of use. This function selection process is called overload resolution and is defined in [over.match]. [Example:

double abs(double);
int abs(int);

abs(1);             // calls abs(int);
abs(1.0);           // calls abs(double);

end example]

16.1 Overloadable declarations [over.load]

Not all function declarations can be overloaded. Those that cannot be overloaded are specified here. A program is ill-formed if it contains two such non-overloadable declarations in the same scope. [Note: This restriction applies to explicit declarations in a scope, and between such declarations and declarations made through a using-declaration. It does not apply to sets of functions fabricated as a result of name lookup (e.g., because of using-directives) or overload resolution (e.g., for operator functions). end note]

Certain function declarations cannot be overloaded:

  • Function declarations that differ only in the return type, the exception specification, or both cannot be overloaded.

  • Member function declarations with the same name and the same parameter-type-list cannot be overloaded if any of them is a static member function declaration ([class.static]). Likewise, member function template declarations with the same name, the same parameter-type-list, and the same template parameter lists cannot be overloaded if any of them is a static member function template declaration. The types of the implicit object parameters constructed for the member functions for the purpose of overload resolution ([over.match.funcs]) are not considered when comparing parameter-type-lists for enforcement of this rule. In contrast, if there is no static member function declaration among a set of member function declarations with the same name and the same parameter-type-list, then these member function declarations can be overloaded if they differ in the type of their implicit object parameter. [Example: The following illustrates this distinction:

    class X {
      static void f();
      void f();                     // ill-formed
      void f() const;               // ill-formed
      void f() const volatile;      // ill-formed
      void g();
      void g() const;               // OK: no static g
      void g() const volatile;      // OK: no static g
    };

    end example]

  • Member function declarations with the same name and the same parameter-type-list as well as member function template declarations with the same name, the same parameter-type-list, and the same template parameter lists cannot be overloaded if any of them, but not all, have a ref-qualifier ([dcl.fct]). [Example:

    class Y {
      void h() &;
      void h() const &;             // OK
      void h() &&;                  // OK, all declarations have a ref-qualifier
      void i() &;
      void i() const;               // ill-formed, prior declaration of i
                                    // has a ref-qualifier
    };

    end example]

[Note: As specified in [dcl.fct], function declarations that have equivalent parameter declarations declare the same function and therefore cannot be overloaded:

  • Parameter declarations that differ only in the use of equivalent typedef “types” are equivalent. A typedef is not a separate type, but only a synonym for another type ([dcl.typedef]). [Example:

    typedef int Int;
    
    void f(int i);
    void f(Int i);                  // OK: redeclaration of f(int)
    void f(int i) { /* ... */ }
    void f(Int i) { /* ... */ }     // error: redefinition of f(int)
    

    end example]

    Enumerations, on the other hand, are distinct types and can be used to distinguish overloaded function declarations. [Example:

    enum E { a };
    
    void f(int i) { /* ... */ }
    void f(E i)   { /* ... */ }

    end example]

  • Parameter declarations that differ only in a pointer * versus an array [] are equivalent. That is, the array declaration is adjusted to become a pointer declaration ([dcl.fct]). Only the second and subsequent array dimensions are significant in parameter types ([dcl.array]). [Example:

    int f(char*);
    int f(char[]);                  // same as f(char*);
    int f(char[7]);                 // same as f(char*);
    int f(char[9]);                 // same as f(char*);
    
    int g(char(*)[10]);
    int g(char[5][10]);             // same as g(char(*)[10]);
    int g(char[7][10]);             // same as g(char(*)[10]);
    int g(char(*)[20]);             // different from g(char(*)[10]);
    

    end example]

  • Parameter declarations that differ only in that one is a function type and the other is a pointer to the same function type are equivalent. That is, the function type is adjusted to become a pointer to function type ([dcl.fct]). [Example:

    void h(int());
    void h(int (*)());              // redeclaration of h(int())
    void h(int x()) { }             // definition of h(int())
    void h(int (*x)()) { }          // ill-formed: redefinition of h(int())
    

    end example]

  • Parameter declarations that differ only in the presence or absence of const and/or volatile are equivalent. That is, the const and volatile type-specifiers for each parameter type are ignored when determining which function is being declared, defined, or called. [Example:

    typedef const int cInt;
    
    int f (int);
    int f (const int);              // redeclaration of f(int)
    int f (int) { /* ... */ }       // definition of f(int)
    int f (cInt) { /* ... */ }      // error: redefinition of f(int)
    

    end example]

    Only the const and volatile type-specifiers at the outermost level of the parameter type specification are ignored in this fashion; const and volatile type-specifiers buried within a parameter type specification are significant and can be used to distinguish overloaded function declarations.123 In particular, for any type T, “pointer to T”, “pointer to const T”, and “pointer to volatile T” are considered distinct parameter types, as are “reference to T”, “reference to const T”, and “reference to volatile T”.

  • Two parameter declarations that differ only in their default arguments are equivalent. [Example: Consider the following:

    void f (int i, int j);
    void f (int i, int j = 99);     // OK: redeclaration of f(int, int)
    void f (int i = 88, int j);     // OK: redeclaration of f(int, int)
    void f ();                      // OK: overloaded declaration of f
    
    void prog () {
        f (1, 2);                   // OK: call f(int, int)
        f (1);                      // OK: call f(int, int)
        f ();                       // Error: f(int, int) or f()?
    }

    end example]

end note]

When a parameter type includes a function type, such as in the case of a parameter type that is a pointer to function, the const and volatile type-specifiers at the outermost level of the parameter type specifications for the inner function type are also ignored.

16.2 Declaration matching [over.dcl]

Two function declarations of the same name refer to the same function if they are in the same scope and have equivalent parameter declarations ([over.load]). A function member of a derived class is not in the same scope as a function member of the same name in a base class. [Example:

struct B {
  int f(int);
};

struct D : B {
  int f(const char*);
};

Here D​::​f(const char*) hides B​::​f(int) rather than overloading it.

void h(D* pd) {
  pd->f(1);                     // error:
                                // D​::​f(const char*) hides B​::​f(int)
  pd->B::f(1);                  // OK
  pd->f("Ben");                 // OK, calls D​::​f
}

end example]

A locally declared function is not in the same scope as a function in a containing scope. [Example:

void f(const char*);
void g() {
  extern void f(int);
  f("asdf");                    // error: f(int) hides f(const char*)
                                // so there is no f(const char*) in this scope
}

void caller () {
  extern void callee(int, int);
  {
    extern void callee(int);    // hides callee(int, int)
    callee(88, 99);             // error: only callee(int) in scope
  }
}

end example]

Different versions of an overloaded member function can be given different access rules. [Example:

class buffer {
private:
    char* p;
    int size;
protected:
    buffer(int s, char* store) { size = s; p = store; }
public:
    buffer(int s) { p = new char[size = s]; }
};

end example]

16.3 Overload resolution [over.match]

Overload resolution is a mechanism for selecting the best function to call given a list of expressions that are to be the arguments of the call and a set of candidate functions that can be called based on the context of the call. The selection criteria for the best function are the number of arguments, how well the arguments match the parameter-type-list of the candidate function, how well (for non-static member functions) the object matches the implicit object parameter, and certain other properties of the candidate function. [Note: The function selected by overload resolution is not guaranteed to be appropriate for the context. Other restrictions, such as the accessibility of the function, can make its use in the calling context ill-formed. end note]

Overload resolution selects the function to call in seven distinct contexts within the language:

Each of these contexts defines the set of candidate functions and the list of arguments in its own unique way. But, once the candidate functions and argument lists have been identified, the selection of the best function is the same in all cases:

  • First, a subset of the candidate functions (those that have the proper number of arguments and meet certain other conditions) is selected to form a set of viable functions ([over.match.viable]).

  • Then the best viable function is selected based on the implicit conversion sequences needed to match each argument to the corresponding parameter of each viable function.

If a best viable function exists and is unique, overload resolution succeeds and produces it as the result. Otherwise overload resolution fails and the invocation is ill-formed. When overload resolution succeeds, and the best viable function is not accessible in the context in which it is used, the program is ill-formed.

16.3.1 Candidate functions and argument lists [over.match.funcs]

The subclauses of [over.match.funcs] describe the set of candidate functions and the argument list submitted to overload resolution in each of the seven contexts in which overload resolution is used. The source transformations and constructions defined in these subclauses are only for the purpose of describing the overload resolution process. An implementation is not required to use such transformations and constructions.

The set of candidate functions can contain both member and non-member functions to be resolved against the same argument list. So that argument and parameter lists are comparable within this heterogeneous set, a member function is considered to have an extra parameter, called the implicit object parameter, which represents the object for which the member function has been called. For the purposes of overload resolution, both static and non-static member functions have an implicit object parameter, but constructors do not.

Similarly, when appropriate, the context can construct an argument list that contains an implied object argument to denote the object to be operated on. Since arguments and parameters are associated by position within their respective lists, the convention is that the implicit object parameter, if present, is always the first parameter and the implied object argument, if present, is always the first argument.

For non-static member functions, the type of the implicit object parameter is

where X is the class of which the function is a member and cv is the cv-qualification on the member function declaration. [Example: For a const member function of class X, the extra parameter is assumed to have type “reference to const X”. end example] For conversion functions, the function is considered to be a member of the class of the implied object argument for the purpose of defining the type of the implicit object parameter. For non-conversion functions introduced by a using-declaration into a derived class, the function is considered to be a member of the derived class for the purpose of defining the type of the implicit object parameter. For static member functions, the implicit object parameter is considered to match any object (since if the function is selected, the object is discarded). [Note: No actual type is established for the implicit object parameter of a static member function, and no attempt will be made to determine a conversion sequence for that parameter ([over.match.best]). end note]

During overload resolution, the implied object argument is indistinguishable from other arguments. The implicit object parameter, however, retains its identity since no user-defined conversions can be applied to achieve a type match with it. For non-static member functions declared without a ref-qualifier, an additional rule applies:

  • even if the implicit object parameter is not const-qualified, an rvalue can be bound to the parameter as long as in all other respects the argument can be converted to the type of the implicit object parameter. [Note: The fact that such an argument is an rvalue does not affect the ranking of implicit conversion sequences. end note]

Because other than in list-initialization only one user-defined conversion is allowed in an implicit conversion sequence, special rules apply when selecting the best user-defined conversion ([over.match.best], [over.best.ics]). [Example:

class T {
public:
  T();
};

class C : T {
public:
  C(int);
};
T a = 1;            // ill-formed: T(C(1)) not tried

end example]

In each case where a candidate is a function template, candidate function template specializations are generated using template argument deduction ([temp.over], [temp.deduct]). Those candidates are then handled as candidate functions in the usual way.124 A given name can refer to one or more function templates and also to a set of overloaded non-template functions. In such a case, the candidate functions generated from each function template are combined with the set of non-template candidate functions.

A defaulted move constructor or assignment operator ([class.copy]) that is defined as deleted is excluded from the set of candidate functions in all contexts.

The process of argument deduction fully determines the parameter types of the function template specializations, i.e., the parameters of function template specializations contain no template parameter types. Therefore, except where specified otherwise, function template specializations and non-template functions ([dcl.fct]) are treated equivalently for the remainder of overload resolution.

16.3.1.1 Function call syntax [over.match.call]

In a function call

postfix-expression ( expression-listopt )

if the postfix-expression denotes a set of overloaded functions and/or function templates, overload resolution is applied as specified in [over.call.func]. If the postfix-expression denotes an object of class type, overload resolution is applied as specified in [over.call.object].

If the postfix-expression denotes the address of a set of overloaded functions and/or function templates, overload resolution is applied using that set as described above. If the function selected by overload resolution is a non-static member function, the program is ill-formed. [Note: The resolution of the address of an overload set in other contexts is described in [over.over]. end note]

16.3.1.1.1 Call to named function [over.call.func]

Of interest in [over.call.func] are only those function calls in which the postfix-expression ultimately contains a name that denotes one or more functions that might be called. Such a postfix-expression, perhaps nested arbitrarily deep in parentheses, has one of the following forms:

postfix-expression:
	postfix-expression . id-expression
	postfix-expression -> id-expression
	primary-expression

These represent two syntactic subcategories of function calls: qualified function calls and unqualified function calls.

In qualified function calls, the name to be resolved is an id-expression and is preceded by an -> or . operator. Since the construct A->B is generally equivalent to (*A).B, the rest of Clause [over] assumes, without loss of generality, that all member function calls have been normalized to the form that uses an object and the . operator. Furthermore, Clause [over] assumes that the postfix-expression that is the left operand of the . operator has type “cv T” where T denotes a class125. Under this assumption, the id-expression in the call is looked up as a member function of T following the rules for looking up names in classes ([class.member.lookup]). The function declarations found by that lookup constitute the set of candidate functions. The argument list is the expression-list in the call augmented by the addition of the left operand of the . operator in the normalized member function call as the implied object argument ([over.match.funcs]).

In unqualified function calls, the name is not qualified by an -> or . operator and has the more general form of a primary-expression. The name is looked up in the context of the function call following the normal rules for name lookup in function calls. The function declarations found by that lookup constitute the set of candidate functions. Because of the rules for name lookup, the set of candidate functions consists (1) entirely of non-member functions or (2) entirely of member functions of some class T. In case (1), the argument list is the same as the expression-list in the call. In case (2), the argument list is the expression-list in the call augmented by the addition of an implied object argument as in a qualified function call. If the keyword this is in scope and refers to class T, or a derived class of T, then the implied object argument is (*this). If the keyword this is not in scope or refers to another class, then a contrived object of type T becomes the implied object argument126. If the argument list is augmented by a contrived object and overload resolution selects one of the non-static member functions of T, the call is ill-formed.

Note that cv-qualifiers on the type of objects are significant in overload resolution for both glvalue and class prvalue objects.

An implied object argument must be contrived to correspond to the implicit object parameter attributed to member functions during overload resolution. It is not used in the call to the selected function. Since the member functions all have the same implicit object parameter, the contrived object will not be the cause to select or reject a function.

16.3.1.1.2 Call to object of class type [over.call.object]

If the primary-expression E in the function call syntax evaluates to a class object of type “cv T”, then the set of candidate functions includes at least the function call operators of T. The function call operators of T are obtained by ordinary lookup of the name operator() in the context of (E).operator().

In addition, for each non-explicit conversion function declared in T of the form

operator conversion-type-id () cv-qualifier ref-qualifieropt noexcept-specifieropt attribute-specifier-seqopt ;

where cv-qualifier is the same cv-qualification as, or a greater cv-qualification than, cv, and where conversion-type-id denotes the type “pointer to function of (P1,,Pn) returning R”, or the type “reference to pointer to function of (P1,,Pn) returning R”, or the type “reference to function of (P1,,Pn) returning R”, a surrogate call function with the unique name call-function and having the form

R call-function ( conversion-type-id  F, P1 a1, , Pn an) { return F (a1, , an); }

is also considered as a candidate function. Similarly, surrogate call functions are added to the set of candidate functions for each non-explicit conversion function declared in a base class of T provided the function is not hidden within T by another intervening declaration127.

If such a surrogate call function is selected by overload resolution, the corresponding conversion function will be called to convert E to the appropriate function pointer or reference, and the function will then be invoked with the arguments of the call. If the conversion function cannot be called (e.g., because of an ambiguity), the program is ill-formed.

The argument list submitted to overload resolution consists of the argument expressions present in the function call syntax preceded by the implied object argument (E). [Note: When comparing the call against the function call operators, the implied object argument is compared against the implicit object parameter of the function call operator. When comparing the call against a surrogate call function, the implied object argument is compared against the first parameter of the surrogate call function. The conversion function from which the surrogate call function was derived will be used in the conversion sequence for that parameter since it converts the implied object argument to the appropriate function pointer or reference required by that first parameter. end note] [Example:

int f1(int);
int f2(float);
typedef int (*fp1)(int);
typedef int (*fp2)(float);
struct A {
  operator fp1() { return f1; }
  operator fp2() { return f2; }
} a;
int i = a(1);                   // calls f1 via pointer returned from conversion function

end example]

Note that this construction can yield candidate call functions that cannot be differentiated one from the other by overload resolution because they have identical declarations or differ only in their return type. The call will be ambiguous if overload resolution cannot select a match to the call that is uniquely better than such undifferentiable functions.

16.3.1.2 Operators in expressions [over.match.oper]

If no operand of an operator in an expression has a type that is a class or an enumeration, the operator is assumed to be a built-in operator and interpreted according to Clause [expr]. [Note: Because ., .*, and ​::​ cannot be overloaded, these operators are always built-in operators interpreted according to Clause [expr]. ?: cannot be overloaded, but the rules in this subclause are used to determine the conversions to be applied to the second and third operands when they have class or enumeration type ([expr.cond]). end note] [Example:

struct String {
  String (const String&);
  String (const char*);
  operator const char* ();
};
String operator + (const String&, const String&);

void f() {
 const char* p= "one" + "two";  // ill-formed because neither operand has class or enumeration type
 int I = 1 + 1;                 // always evaluates to 2 even if class or enumeration types exist
                                // that would perform the operation.
}

end example]

If either operand has a type that is a class or an enumeration, a user-defined operator function might be declared that implements this operator or a user-defined conversion can be necessary to convert the operand to a type that is appropriate for a built-in operator. In this case, overload resolution is used to determine which operator function or built-in operator is to be invoked to implement the operator. Therefore, the operator notation is first transformed to the equivalent function-call notation as summarized in Table 12 (where @ denotes one of the operators covered in the specified subclause). However, the operands are sequenced in the order prescribed for the built-in operator (Clause [expr]).

Table 12 — Relationship between operator and function call notation
Subclause Expression As member function As non-member function
[over.unary] @a (a).operator@ () operator@(a)
[over.binary] a@b (a).operator@ (b) operator@(a, b)
[over.ass] a=b (a).operator= (b)
[over.sub] a[b] (a).operator[](b)
[over.ref] a-> (a).operator->()
[over.inc] a@ (a).operator@ (0) operator@(a, 0)

For a unary operator @ with an operand of a type whose cv-unqualified version is T1, and for a binary operator @ with a left operand of a type whose cv-unqualified version is T1 and a right operand of a type whose cv-unqualified version is T2, three sets of candidate functions, designated member candidates, non-member candidates and built-in candidates, are constructed as follows:

  • If T1 is a complete class type or a class currently being defined, the set of member candidates is the result of the qualified lookup of T1​::​operator@ ([over.call.func]); otherwise, the set of member candidates is empty.

  • The set of non-member candidates is the result of the unqualified lookup of operator@ in the context of the expression according to the usual rules for name lookup in unqualified function calls ([basic.lookup.argdep]) except that all member functions are ignored. However, if no operand has a class type, only those non-member functions in the lookup set that have a first parameter of type T1 or “reference to cv T1”, when T1 is an enumeration type, or (if there is a right operand) a second parameter of type T2 or “reference to cv T2”, when T2 is an enumeration type, are candidate functions.

  • For the operator ,, the unary operator &, or the operator ->, the built-in candidates set is empty. For all other operators, the built-in candidates include all of the candidate operator functions defined in [over.built] that, compared to the given operator,

    • have the same operator name, and

    • accept the same number of operands, and

    • accept operand types to which the given operand or operands can be converted according to [over.best.ics], and

    • do not have the same parameter-type-list as any non-member candidate that is not a function template specialization.

For the built-in assignment operators, conversions of the left operand are restricted as follows:

  • no temporaries are introduced to hold the left operand, and

  • no user-defined conversions are applied to the left operand to achieve a type match with the left-most parameter of a built-in candidate.

For all other operators, no such restrictions apply.

The set of candidate functions for overload resolution is the union of the member candidates, the non-member candidates, and the built-in candidates. The argument list contains all of the operands of the operator. The best function from the set of candidate functions is selected according to [over.match.viable] and [over.match.best].128 [Example:

struct A {
  operator int();
};
A operator+(const A&, const A&);
void m() {
  A a, b;
  a + b;                        // operator+(a, b) chosen over int(a) + int(b)
}

end example]

If a built-in candidate is selected by overload resolution, the operands of class type are converted to the types of the corresponding parameters of the selected operation function, except that the second standard conversion sequence of a user-defined conversion sequence is not applied. Then the operator is treated as the corresponding built-in operator and interpreted according to Clause [expr]. [Example:

struct X {
  operator double();
};

struct Y {
  operator int*();
};

int *a = Y() + 100.0;           // error: pointer arithmetic requires integral operand
int *b = Y() + X();             // error: pointer arithmetic requires integral operand

end example]

The second operand of operator -> is ignored in selecting an operator-> function, and is not an argument when the operator-> function is called. When operator-> returns, the operator -> is applied to the value returned, with the original second operand.129

If the operator is the operator ,, the unary operator &, or the operator ->, and there are no viable functions, then the operator is assumed to be the built-in operator and interpreted according to Clause [expr].

[Note: The lookup rules for operators in expressions are different than the lookup rules for operator function names in a function call, as shown in the following example:

struct A { };
void operator + (A, A);

struct B {
  void operator + (B);
  void f ();
};

A a;

void B::f() {
  operator+ (a,a);              // error: global operator hidden by member
  a + a;                        // OK: calls global operator+
}

end note]

If the set of candidate functions is empty, overload resolution is unsuccessful.

If the value returned by the operator-> function has class type, this may result in selecting and calling another operator-> function. The process repeats until an operator-> function returns a value of non-class type.

16.3.1.3 Initialization by constructor [over.match.ctor]

When objects of class type are direct-initialized, copy-initialized from an expression of the same or a derived class type ([dcl.init]), or default-initialized, overload resolution selects the constructor. For direct-initialization or default-initialization that is not in the context of copy-initialization, the candidate functions are all the constructors of the class of the object being initialized. For copy-initialization, the candidate functions are all the converting constructors of that class. The argument list is the expression-list or assignment-expression of the initializer.

16.3.1.4 Copy-initialization of class by user-defined conversion [over.match.copy]

Under the conditions specified in [dcl.init], as part of a copy-initialization of an object of class type, a user-defined conversion can be invoked to convert an initializer expression to the type of the object being initialized. Overload resolution is used to select the user-defined conversion to be invoked. [Note: The conversion performed for indirect binding to a reference to a possibly cv-qualified class type is determined in terms of a corresponding non-reference copy-initialization. end note] Assuming that “cv1 T” is the type of the object being initialized, with T a class type, the candidate functions are selected as follows:

  • The converting constructors of T are candidate functions.

  • When the type of the initializer expression is a class type “cv S”, the non-explicit conversion functions of S and its base classes are considered. When initializing a temporary to be bound to the first parameter of a constructor where the parameter is of type “reference to possibly cv-qualified T” and the constructor is called with a single argument in the context of direct-initialization of an object of type “cv2 T”, explicit conversion functions are also considered. Those that are not hidden within S and yield a type whose cv-unqualified version is the same type as T or is a derived class thereof are candidate functions. Conversion functions that return “reference to X” return lvalues or xvalues, depending on the type of reference, of type X and are therefore considered to yield X for this process of selecting candidate functions.

In both cases, the argument list has one argument, which is the initializer expression. [Note: This argument will be compared against the first parameter of the constructors and against the implicit object parameter of the conversion functions. end note]

16.3.1.5 Initialization by conversion function [over.match.conv]

Under the conditions specified in [dcl.init], as part of an initialization of an object of non-class type, a conversion function can be invoked to convert an initializer expression of class type to the type of the object being initialized. Overload resolution is used to select the conversion function to be invoked. Assuming that “cv1 T” is the type of the object being initialized, and “cv S” is the type of the initializer expression, with S a class type, the candidate functions are selected as follows:

  • The conversion functions of S and its base classes are considered. Those non-explicit conversion functions that are not hidden within S and yield type T or a type that can be converted to type T via a standard conversion sequence are candidate functions. For direct-initialization, those explicit conversion functions that are not hidden within S and yield type T or a type that can be converted to type T with a qualification conversion are also candidate functions. Conversion functions that return a cv-qualified type are considered to yield the cv-unqualified version of that type for this process of selecting candidate functions. Conversion functions that return “reference to cv2 X” return lvalues or xvalues, depending on the type of reference, of type “cv2 X” and are therefore considered to yield X for this process of selecting candidate functions.

The argument list has one argument, which is the initializer expression. [Note: This argument will be compared against the implicit object parameter of the conversion functions. end note]

16.3.1.6 Initialization by conversion function for direct reference binding [over.match.ref]

Under the conditions specified in [dcl.init.ref], a reference can be bound directly to a glvalue or class prvalue that is the result of applying a conversion function to an initializer expression. Overload resolution is used to select the conversion function to be invoked. Assuming that “reference to cv1 T” is the type of the reference being initialized, and “cv S” is the type of the initializer expression, with S a class type, the candidate functions are selected as follows:

  • The conversion functions of S and its base classes are considered. Those non-explicit conversion functions that are not hidden within S and yield type “lvalue reference to cv2 T2” (when initializing an lvalue reference or an rvalue reference to function) or “cv2 T2” or “rvalue reference to cv2 T2” (when initializing an rvalue reference or an lvalue reference to function), where “cv1 T” is reference-compatible with “cv2 T2”, are candidate functions. For direct-initialization, those explicit conversion functions that are not hidden within S and yield type “lvalue reference to cv2 T2” or “cv2 T2” or “rvalue reference to cv2 T2”, respectively, where T2 is the same type as T or can be converted to type T with a qualification conversion, are also candidate functions.

The argument list has one argument, which is the initializer expression. [Note: This argument will be compared against the implicit object parameter of the conversion functions. end note]

16.3.1.7 Initialization by list-initialization [over.match.list]

When objects of non-aggregate class type T are list-initialized such that [dcl.init.list] specifies that overload resolution is performed according to the rules in this section, overload resolution selects the constructor in two phases:

  • Initially, the candidate functions are the initializer-list constructors ([dcl.init.list]) of the class T and the argument list consists of the initializer list as a single argument.

  • If no viable initializer-list constructor is found, overload resolution is performed again, where the candidate functions are all the constructors of the class T and the argument list consists of the elements of the initializer list.

If the initializer list has no elements and T has a default constructor, the first phase is omitted. In copy-list-initialization, if an explicit constructor is chosen, the initialization is ill-formed. [Note: This differs from other situations ([over.match.ctor], [over.match.copy]), where only converting constructors are considered for copy-initialization. This restriction only applies if this initialization is part of the final result of overload resolution. end note]

16.3.1.8 Class template argument deduction [over.match.class.deduct]

A set of functions and function templates is formed comprising:

  • For each constructor of the primary class template designated by the template-name, if the template is defined, a function template with the following properties:

    • The template parameters are the template parameters of the class template followed by the template parameters (including default template arguments) of the constructor, if any.

    • The types of the function parameters are those of the constructor.

    • The return type is the class template specialization designated by the template-name and template arguments corresponding to the template parameters obtained from the class template.

  • If the primary class template C is not defined or does not declare any constructors, an additional function template derived as above from a hypothetical constructor C().

  • An additional function template derived as above from a hypothetical constructor C(C), called the copy deduction candidate.

  • For each deduction-guide, a function or function template with the following properties:

Initialization and overload resolution are performed as described in [dcl.init] and [over.match.ctor], [over.match.copy], or [over.match.list] (as appropriate for the type of initialization performed) for an object of a hypothetical class type, where the selected functions and function templates are considered to be the constructors of that class type for the purpose of forming an overload set, and the initializer is provided by the context in which class template argument deduction was performed. Each such notional constructor is considered to be explicit if the function or function template was generated from a constructor or deduction-guide that was declared explicit. All such notional constructors are considered to be public members of the hypothetical class type.

[Example:

template <class T> struct A {
  explicit A(const T&, ...) noexcept;  // #1
  A(T&&, ...);                         // #2
};

int i;
A a1 = { i, i };    // error: explicit constructor #1 selected in copy-list-initialization during deduction,
                    // cannot deduce from non-forwarding rvalue reference in #2

A a2{i, i};         // OK, #1 deduces to A<int> and also initializes
A a3{0, i};         // OK, #2 deduces to A<int> and also initializes
A a4 = {0, i};      // OK, #2 deduces to A<int> and also initializes

template <class T> A(const T&, const T&) -> A<T&>;  // #3
template <class T> explicit A(T&&, T&&) -> A<T>;    // #4

A a5 = {0, 1};      // error: explicit deduction guide #4 selected in copy-list-initialization during deduction
A a6{0,1};          // OK, #4 deduces to A<int> and #2 initializes
A a7 = {0, i};      // error: #3 deduces to A<int&>, #1 and #2 declare same constructor
A a8{0,i};          // error: #3 deduces to A<int&>, #1 and #2 declare same constructor

template <class T> struct B {
  template <class U> using TA = T;
  template <class U> B(U, TA<U>);
};

B b{(int*)0, (char*)0};         // OK, deduces B<char*>

end example]

16.3.2 Viable functions [over.match.viable]

From the set of candidate functions constructed for a given context ([over.match.funcs]), a set of viable functions is chosen, from which the best function will be selected by comparing argument conversion sequences for the best fit ([over.match.best]). The selection of viable functions considers relationships between arguments and function parameters other than the ranking of conversion sequences.

First, to be a viable function, a candidate function shall have enough parameters to agree in number with the arguments in the list.

  • If there are m arguments in the list, all candidate functions having exactly m parameters are viable.

  • A candidate function having fewer than m parameters is viable only if it has an ellipsis in its parameter list ([dcl.fct]). For the purposes of overload resolution, any argument for which there is no corresponding parameter is considered to “match the ellipsis” ([over.ics.ellipsis]) .

  • A candidate function having more than m parameters is viable only if the (m+1)-st parameter has a default argument.130 For the purposes of overload resolution, the parameter list is truncated on the right, so that there are exactly m parameters.

Second, for F to be a viable function, there shall exist for each argument an implicit conversion sequence that converts that argument to the corresponding parameter of F. If the parameter has reference type, the implicit conversion sequence includes the operation of binding the reference, and the fact that an lvalue reference to non-const cannot be bound to an rvalue and that an rvalue reference cannot be bound to an lvalue can affect the viability of the function (see [over.ics.ref]).

According to [dcl.fct.default], parameters following the (m+1)-st parameter must also have default arguments.

16.3.3 Best viable function [over.match.best]

Define ICSi(F) as follows:

  • If F is a static member function, ICS1(F) is defined such that ICS1(F) is neither better nor worse than ICS1(G) for any function G, and, symmetrically, ICS1(G) is neither better nor worse than ICS1(F);131 otherwise,

  • let ICSi(F) denote the implicit conversion sequence that converts the i-th argument in the list to the type of the i-th parameter of viable function F. [over.best.ics] defines the implicit conversion sequences and [over.ics.rank] defines what it means for one implicit conversion sequence to be a better conversion sequence or worse conversion sequence than another.

Given these definitions, a viable function F1 is defined to be a better function than another viable function F2 if for all arguments i, ICSi(F1) is not a worse conversion sequence than ICSi(F2), and then

  • for some argument j, ICSj(F1) is a better conversion sequence than ICSj(F2), or, if not that,

  • the context is an initialization by user-defined conversion (see [dcl.init], [over.match.conv], and [over.match.ref]) and the standard conversion sequence from the return type of F1 to the destination type (i.e., the type of the entity being initialized) is a better conversion sequence than the standard conversion sequence from the return type of F2 to the destination type [Example:

    struct A {
      A();
      operator int();
      operator double();
    } a;
    int i = a;          // a.operator int() followed by no conversion is better than
                        // a.operator double() followed by a conversion to int
    float x = a;        // ambiguous: both possibilities require conversions,
                        // and neither is better than the other
    

    end example] or, if not that,

  • the context is an initialization by conversion function for direct reference binding of a reference to function type, the return type of F1 is the same kind of reference (i.e. lvalue or rvalue) as the reference being initialized, and the return type of F2 is not [Example:

    template <class T> struct A {
      operator T&();    // #1
      operator T&&();   // #2
    };
    typedef int Fn();
    A<Fn> a;
    Fn& lf = a;         // calls #1
    Fn&& rf = a;        // calls #2
    

    end example] or, if not that,

  • F1 is not a function template specialization and F2 is a function template specialization, or, if not that,

  • F1 and F2 are function template specializations, and the function template for F1 is more specialized than the template for F2 according to the partial ordering rules described in [temp.func.order], or, if not that,

  • F1 is generated from a deduction-guide ([over.match.class.deduct]) and F2 is not, or, if not that,

  • F1 is the copy deduction candidate ([over.match.class.deduct]) and F2 is not, or, if not that,

  • F1 is generated from a non-template constructor and F2 is generated from a constructor template. [Example:

    template <class T> struct A {
      using value_type = T;
      A(value_type);    // #1
      A(const A&);      // #2
      A(T, T, int);     // #3
      template<class U>
        A(int, T, U);   // #4
      // #5 is the copy deduction candidate, A(A)
    };
    
    A x(1, 2, 3);       // uses #3, generated from a non-template constructor
    
    template <class T>
    A(T) -> A<T>;       // #6, less specialized than #5
    
    A a(42);            // uses #6 to deduce A<int> and #1 to initialize
    A b = a;            // uses #5 to deduce A<int> and #2 to initialize
    
    template <class T>
    A(A<T>) -> A<A<T>>; // #7, as specialized as #5
    
    A b2 = a;           // uses #7 to deduce A<A<int>> and #1 to initialize
    

    end example]

If there is exactly one viable function that is a better function than all other viable functions, then it is the one selected by overload resolution; otherwise the call is ill-formed.132 [Example:

void Fcn(const int*,  short);
void Fcn(int*, int);

int i;
short s = 0;

void f() {
  Fcn(&i, s);       // is ambiguous because &i  int* is better than &i  const int*
                    // but s  short is also better than s  int

  Fcn(&i, 1L);      // calls Fcn(int*, int), because &i  int* is better than &i  const int*
                    // and 1L  short and 1L  int are indistinguishable

  Fcn(&i, 'c');     // calls Fcn(int*, int), because &i  int* is better than &i  const int*
                    // and c  int is better than c  short
}

end example]

If the best viable function resolves to a function for which multiple declarations were found, and if at least two of these declarations — or the declarations they refer to in the case of using-declarations — specify a default argument that made the function viable, the program is ill-formed. [Example:

namespace A {
  extern "C" void f(int = 5);
}
namespace B {
  extern "C" void f(int = 5);
}

using A::f;
using B::f;

void use() {
  f(3);             // OK, default argument was not used for viability
  f();              // Error: found default argument twice
}

end example]

If a function is a static member function, this definition means that the first argument, the implied object argument, has no effect in the determination of whether the function is better or worse than any other function.

The algorithm for selecting the best viable function is linear in the number of viable functions. Run a simple tournament to find a function W that is not worse than any opponent it faced. Although another function F that W did not face might be at least as good as W, F cannot be the best function because at some point in the tournament F encountered another function G such that F was not better than G. Hence, W is either the best function or there is no best function. So, make a second pass over the viable functions to verify that W is better than all other functions.

16.3.3.1 Implicit conversion sequences [over.best.ics]

An implicit conversion sequence is a sequence of conversions used to convert an argument in a function call to the type of the corresponding parameter of the function being called. The sequence of conversions is an implicit conversion as defined in Clause [conv], which means it is governed by the rules for initialization of an object or reference by a single expression ([dcl.init], [dcl.init.ref]).

Implicit conversion sequences are concerned only with the type, cv-qualification, and value category of the argument and how these are converted to match the corresponding properties of the parameter. Other properties, such as the lifetime, storage class, alignment, accessibility of the argument, whether the argument is a bit-field, and whether a function is deleted, are ignored. So, although an implicit conversion sequence can be defined for a given argument-parameter pair, the conversion from the argument to the parameter might still be ill-formed in the final analysis.

A well-formed implicit conversion sequence is one of the following forms:

However, if the target is

  • the first parameter of a constructor or

  • the implicit object parameter of a user-defined conversion function

and the constructor or user-defined conversion function is a candidate by

user-defined conversion sequences are not considered. [Note: These rules prevent more than one user-defined conversion from being applied during overload resolution, thereby avoiding infinite recursion. end note] [Example:

  struct Y { Y(int); };
  struct A { operator int(); };
  Y y1 = A();       // error: A​::​operator int() is not a candidate

  struct X { };
  struct B { operator X(); };
  B b;
  X x({b});         // error: B​::​operator X() is not a candidate

end example]

For the case where the parameter type is a reference, see [over.ics.ref].

When the parameter type is not a reference, the implicit conversion sequence models a copy-initialization of the parameter from the argument expression. The implicit conversion sequence is the one required to convert the argument expression to a prvalue of the type of the parameter. [Note: When the parameter has a class type, this is a conceptual conversion defined for the purposes of Clause [over]; the actual initialization is defined in terms of constructors and is not a conversion. end note] Any difference in top-level cv-qualification is subsumed by the initialization itself and does not constitute a conversion. [Example: A parameter of type A can be initialized from an argument of type const A. The implicit conversion sequence for that case is the identity sequence; it contains no “conversion” from const A to A. end example] When the parameter has a class type and the argument expression has the same type, the implicit conversion sequence is an identity conversion. When the parameter has a class type and the argument expression has a derived class type, the implicit conversion sequence is a derived-to-base Conversion from the derived class to the base class. [Note: There is no such standard conversion; this derived-to-base Conversion exists only in the description of implicit conversion sequences. end note] A derived-to-base Conversion has Conversion rank ([over.ics.scs]).

In all contexts, when converting to the implicit object parameter or when converting to the left operand of an assignment operation only standard conversion sequences are allowed.

If no conversions are required to match an argument to a parameter type, the implicit conversion sequence is the standard conversion sequence consisting of the identity conversion ([over.ics.scs]).

If no sequence of conversions can be found to convert an argument to a parameter type, an implicit conversion sequence cannot be formed.

If several different sequences of conversions exist that each convert the argument to the parameter type, the implicit conversion sequence associated with the parameter is defined to be the unique conversion sequence designated the ambiguous conversion sequence. For the purpose of ranking implicit conversion sequences as described in [over.ics.rank], the ambiguous conversion sequence is treated as a user-defined conversion sequence that is indistinguishable from any other user-defined conversion sequence. [Note: This rule prevents a function from becoming non-viable because of an ambiguous conversion sequence for one of its parameters. [Example:

class B;
class A { A (B&);};
class B { operator A (); };
class C { C (B&); };
void f(A) { }
void f(C) { }
B b;
f(b);               // ill-formed: ambiguous because there is a conversion b  C (via constructor)
                    // and an (ambiguous) conversion b  A (via constructor or conversion function)
void f(B) { }
f(b);               // OK, unambiguous

end example] end note] If a function that uses the ambiguous conversion sequence is selected as the best viable function, the call will be ill-formed because the conversion of one of the arguments in the call is ambiguous.

The three forms of implicit conversion sequences mentioned above are defined in the following subclauses.

16.3.3.1.1 Standard conversion sequences [over.ics.scs]

Table 13 summarizes the conversions defined in Clause [conv] and partitions them into four disjoint categories: Lvalue Transformation, Qualification Adjustment, Promotion, and Conversion. [Note: These categories are orthogonal with respect to value category, cv-qualification, and data representation: the Lvalue Transformations do not change the cv-qualification or data representation of the type; the Qualification Adjustments do not change the value category or data representation of the type; and the Promotions and Conversions do not change the value category or cv-qualification of the type. end note]

[Note: As described in Clause [conv], a standard conversion sequence is either the Identity conversion by itself (that is, no conversion) or consists of one to three conversions from the other four categories. If there are two or more conversions in the sequence, the conversions are applied in the canonical order: Lvalue Transformation, Promotion or Conversion, Qualification Adjustment. end note]

Each conversion in Table 13 also has an associated rank (Exact Match, Promotion, or Conversion). These are used to rank standard conversion sequences. The rank of a conversion sequence is determined by considering the rank of each conversion in the sequence and the rank of any reference binding. If any of those has Conversion rank, the sequence has Conversion rank; otherwise, if any of those has Promotion rank, the sequence has Promotion rank; otherwise, the sequence has Exact Match rank.

Table 13 — Conversions
Conversion Category Rank Subclause
No conversions required Identity
Lvalue-to-rvalue conversion [conv.lval]
Array-to-pointer conversion Lvalue Transformation [conv.array]
Function-to-pointer conversion Exact Match [conv.func]
Qualification conversions [conv.qual]
Function pointer conversion Qualification Adjustment [conv.fctptr]
Integral promotions [conv.prom]
Floating-point promotion Promotion Promotion [conv.fpprom]
Integral conversions [conv.integral]
Floating-point conversions [conv.double]
Floating-integral conversions [conv.fpint]
Pointer conversions Conversion Conversion [conv.ptr]
Pointer to member conversions [conv.mem]
Boolean conversions [conv.bool]

16.3.3.1.2 User-defined conversion sequences [over.ics.user]

A user-defined conversion sequence consists of an initial standard conversion sequence followed by a user-defined conversion ([class.conv]) followed by a second standard conversion sequence. If the user-defined conversion is specified by a constructor, the initial standard conversion sequence converts the source type to the type required by the argument of the constructor. If the user-defined conversion is specified by a conversion function, the initial standard conversion sequence converts the source type to the implicit object parameter of the conversion function.

The second standard conversion sequence converts the result of the user-defined conversion to the target type for the sequence. Since an implicit conversion sequence is an initialization, the special rules for initialization by user-defined conversion apply when selecting the best user-defined conversion for a user-defined conversion sequence (see [over.match.best] and [over.best.ics]).

If the user-defined conversion is specified by a specialization of a conversion function template, the second standard conversion sequence shall have exact match rank.

A conversion of an expression of class type to the same class type is given Exact Match rank, and a conversion of an expression of class type to a base class of that type is given Conversion rank, in spite of the fact that a constructor (i.e., a user-defined conversion function) is called for those cases.

16.3.3.1.3 Ellipsis conversion sequences [over.ics.ellipsis]

An ellipsis conversion sequence occurs when an argument in a function call is matched with the ellipsis parameter specification of the function called (see [expr.call]).

16.3.3.1.4 Reference binding [over.ics.ref]

When a parameter of reference type binds directly to an argument expression, the implicit conversion sequence is the identity conversion, unless the argument expression has a type that is a derived class of the parameter type, in which case the implicit conversion sequence is a derived-to-base Conversion ([over.best.ics]). [Example:

struct A {};
struct B : public A {} b;
int f(A&);
int f(B&);
int i = f(b);       // calls f(B&), an exact match, rather than f(A&), a conversion

end example] If the parameter binds directly to the result of applying a conversion function to the argument expression, the implicit conversion sequence is a user-defined conversion sequence, with the second standard conversion sequence either an identity conversion or, if the conversion function returns an entity of a type that is a derived class of the parameter type, a derived-to-base Conversion.

When a parameter of reference type is not bound directly to an argument expression, the conversion sequence is the one required to convert the argument expression to the referenced type according to [over.best.ics]. Conceptually, this conversion sequence corresponds to copy-initializing a temporary of the referenced type with the argument expression. Any difference in top-level cv-qualification is subsumed by the initialization itself and does not constitute a conversion.

Except for an implicit object parameter, for which see [over.match.funcs], a standard conversion sequence cannot be formed if it requires binding an lvalue reference other than a reference to a non-volatile const type to an rvalue or binding an rvalue reference to an lvalue other than a function lvalue. [Note: This means, for example, that a candidate function cannot be a viable function if it has a non-const lvalue reference parameter (other than the implicit object parameter) and the corresponding argument would require a temporary to be created to initialize the lvalue reference (see [dcl.init.ref]). end note]

Other restrictions on binding a reference to a particular argument that are not based on the types of the reference and the argument do not affect the formation of a standard conversion sequence, however. [Example: A function with an “lvalue reference to int” parameter can be a viable candidate even if the corresponding argument is an int bit-field. The formation of implicit conversion sequences treats the int bit-field as an int lvalue and finds an exact match with the parameter. If the function is selected by overload resolution, the call will nonetheless be ill-formed because of the prohibition on binding a non-const lvalue reference to a bit-field ([dcl.init.ref]). end example]

16.3.3.1.5 List-initialization sequence [over.ics.list]

When an argument is an initializer list ([dcl.init.list]), it is not an expression and special rules apply for converting it to a parameter type.

If the parameter type is an aggregate class X and the initializer list has a single element of type cv U, where U is X or a class derived from X, the implicit conversion sequence is the one required to convert the element to the parameter type.

Otherwise, if the parameter type is a character array133 and the initializer list has a single element that is an appropriately-typed string literal ([dcl.init.string]), the implicit conversion sequence is the identity conversion.

Otherwise, if the parameter type is std​::​initializer_­list<X> and all the elements of the initializer list can be implicitly converted to X, the implicit conversion sequence is the worst conversion necessary to convert an element of the list to X, or if the initializer list has no elements, the identity conversion. This conversion can be a user-defined conversion even in the context of a call to an initializer-list constructor. [Example:

void f(std::initializer_list<int>);
f( {} );                // OK: f(initializer_­list<int>) identity conversion
f( {1,2,3} );           // OK: f(initializer_­list<int>) identity conversion
f( {'a','b'} );         // OK: f(initializer_­list<int>) integral promotion
f( {1.0} );             // error: narrowing

struct A {
  A(std::initializer_list<double>);             // #1
  A(std::initializer_list<complex<double>>);    // #2
  A(std::initializer_list<std::string>);        // #3
};
A a{ 1.0,2.0 };         // OK, uses #1

void g(A);
g({ "foo", "bar" });    // OK, uses #3

typedef int IA[3];
void h(const IA&);
h({ 1, 2, 3 });         // OK: identity conversion

end example]

Otherwise, if the parameter type is “array of N X”, if there exists an implicit conversion sequence for each element of the array from the corresponding element of the initializer list (or from {} if there is no such element), the implicit conversion sequence is the worst such implicit conversion sequence.

Otherwise, if the parameter is a non-aggregate class X and overload resolution per [over.match.list] chooses a single best constructor C of X to perform the initialization of an object of type X from the argument initializer list:

  • If C is not an initializer-list constructor and the initializer list has a single element of type cv U, where U is X or a class derived from X, the implicit conversion sequence has Exact Match rank if U is X, or Conversion rank if U is derived from X.

  • Otherwise, the implicit conversion sequence is a user-defined conversion sequence with the second standard conversion sequence an identity conversion.

If multiple constructors are viable but none is better than the others, the implicit conversion sequence is the ambiguous conversion sequence. User-defined conversions are allowed for conversion of the initializer list elements to the constructor parameter types except as noted in [over.best.ics]. [Example:

struct A {
  A(std::initializer_list<int>);
};
void f(A);
f( {'a', 'b'} );        // OK: f(A(std​::​initializer_­list<int>)) user-defined conversion

struct B {
  B(int, double);
};
void g(B);
g( {'a', 'b'} );        // OK: g(B(int, double)) user-defined conversion
g( {1.0, 1.0} );        // error: narrowing

void f(B);
f( {'a', 'b'} );        // error: ambiguous f(A) or f(B)

struct C {
  C(std::string);
};
void h(C);
h({"foo"});             // OK: h(C(std​::​string("foo")))

struct D {
  D(A, C);
};
void i(D);
i({ {1,2}, {"bar"} });  // OK: i(D(A(std​::​initializer_­list<int>{1,2}), C(std​::​string("bar"))))

end example]

Otherwise, if the parameter has an aggregate type which can be initialized from the initializer list according to the rules for aggregate initialization, the implicit conversion sequence is a user-defined conversion sequence with the second standard conversion sequence an identity conversion. [Example:

struct A {
  int m1;
  double m2;
};

void f(A);
f( {'a', 'b'} );        // OK: f(A(int,double)) user-defined conversion
f( {1.0} );             // error: narrowing

end example]

Otherwise, if the parameter is a reference, see [over.ics.ref]. [Note: The rules in this section will apply for initializing the underlying temporary for the reference. end note] [Example:

struct A {
  int m1;
  double m2;
};

void f(const A&);
f( {'a', 'b'} );        // OK: f(A(int,double)) user-defined conversion
f( {1.0} );             // error: narrowing

void g(const double &);
g({1});                 // same conversion as int to double

end example]

Otherwise, if the parameter type is not a class:

  • if the initializer list has one element that is not itself an initializer list, the implicit conversion sequence is the one required to convert the element to the parameter type; [Example:

    void f(int);
    f( {'a'} );             // OK: same conversion as char to int
    f( {1.0} );             // error: narrowing
    

    end example]

  • if the initializer list has no elements, the implicit conversion sequence is the identity conversion. [Example:

    void f(int);
    f( { } );               // OK: identity conversion
    

    end example]

In all cases other than those enumerated above, no conversion is possible.

Since there are no parameters of array type, this will only occur as the referenced type of a reference parameter.

16.3.3.2 Ranking implicit conversion sequences [over.ics.rank]

This subclause defines a partial ordering of implicit conversion sequences based on the relationships better conversion sequence and better conversion. If an implicit conversion sequence S1 is defined by these rules to be a better conversion sequence than S2, then it is also the case that S2 is a worse conversion sequence than S1. If conversion sequence S1 is neither better than nor worse than conversion sequence S2, S1 and S2 are said to be indistinguishable conversion sequences.

When comparing the basic forms of implicit conversion sequences (as defined in [over.best.ics])

Two implicit conversion sequences of the same form are indistinguishable conversion sequences unless one of the following rules applies:

  • List-initialization sequence L1 is a better conversion sequence than list-initialization sequence L2 if

    • L1 converts to std​::​initializer_­list<X> for some X and L2 does not, or, if not that,

    • L1 converts to type “array of N1 T”, L2 converts to type “array of N2 T”, and N1 is smaller than N2,

    even if one of the other rules in this paragraph would otherwise apply. [Example:

      void f1(int);                                 // #1
      void f1(std::initializer_list<long>);         // #2
      void g1() { f1({42}); }                       // chooses #2
    
      void f2(std::pair<const char*, const char*>); // #3
      void f2(std::initializer_list<std::string>);  // #4
      void g2() { f2({"foo","bar"}); }              // chooses #4
    

    end example]

  • Standard conversion sequence S1 is a better conversion sequence than standard conversion sequence S2 if

    • S1 is a proper subsequence of S2 (comparing the conversion sequences in the canonical form defined by [over.ics.scs], excluding any Lvalue Transformation; the identity conversion sequence is considered to be a subsequence of any non-identity conversion sequence) or, if not that,

    • the rank of S1 is better than the rank of S2, or S1 and S2 have the same rank and are distinguishable by the rules in the paragraph below, or, if not that,

    • S1 and S2 are reference bindings ([dcl.init.ref]) and neither refers to an implicit object parameter of a non-static member function declared without a ref-qualifier, and S1 binds an rvalue reference to an rvalue and S2 binds an lvalue reference [Example:

      int i;
      int f1();
      int&& f2();
      int g(const int&);
      int g(const int&&);
      int j = g(i);                   // calls g(const int&)
      int k = g(f1());                // calls g(const int&&)
      int l = g(f2());                // calls g(const int&&)
      
      struct A {
        A& operator<<(int);
        void p() &;
        void p() &&;
      };
      A& operator<<(A&&, char);
      A() << 1;                       // calls A​::​operator<<(int)
      A() << 'c';                     // calls operator<<(A&&, char)
      A a;
      a << 1;                         // calls A​::​operator<<(int)
      a << 'c';                       // calls A​::​operator<<(int)
      A().p();                        // calls A​::​p()&&
      a.p();                          // calls A​::​p()&
      

      end example] or, if not that,

    • S1 and S2 are reference bindings ([dcl.init.ref]) and S1 binds an lvalue reference to a function lvalue and S2 binds an rvalue reference to a function lvalue [Example:

      int f(void(&)());               // #1
      int f(void(&&)());              // #2
      void g();
      int i1 = f(g);                  // calls #1
      

      end example] or, if not that,

    • S1 and S2 differ only in their qualification conversion and yield similar types T1 and T2 ([conv.qual]), respectively, and the cv-qualification signature of type T1 is a proper subset of the cv-qualification signature of type T2 [Example:

      int f(const volatile int *);
      int f(const int *);
      int i;
      int j = f(&i);                  // calls f(const int*)
      

      end example] or, if not that,

    • S1 and S2 are reference bindings ([dcl.init.ref]), and the types to which the references refer are the same type except for top-level cv-qualifiers, and the type to which the reference initialized by S2 refers is more cv-qualified than the type to which the reference initialized by S1 refers. [Example:

      int f(const int &);
      int f(int &);
      int g(const int &);
      int g(int);
      
      int i;
      int j = f(i);                   // calls f(int &)
      int k = g(i);                   // ambiguous
      
      struct X {
        void f() const;
        void f();
      };
      void g(const X& a, X b) {
        a.f();                        // calls X​::​f() const
        b.f();                        // calls X​::​f()
      }

      end example]

  • User-defined conversion sequence U1 is a better conversion sequence than another user-defined conversion sequence U2 if they contain the same user-defined conversion function or constructor or they initialize the same class in an aggregate initialization and in either case the second standard conversion sequence of U1 is better than the second standard conversion sequence of U2. [Example:

    struct A {
      operator short();
    } a;
    int f(int);
    int f(float);
    int i = f(a);                   // calls f(int), because short  int is
                                    // better than short  float.
    

    end example]

Standard conversion sequences are ordered by their ranks: an Exact Match is a better conversion than a Promotion, which is a better conversion than a Conversion. Two conversion sequences with the same rank are indistinguishable unless one of the following rules applies:

  • A conversion that does not convert a pointer, a pointer to member, or std​::​nullptr_­t to bool is better than one that does.

  • A conversion that promotes an enumeration whose underlying type is fixed to its underlying type is better than one that promotes to the promoted underlying type, if the two are different.

  • If class B is derived directly or indirectly from class A, conversion of B* to A* is better than conversion of B* to void*, and conversion of A* to void* is better than conversion of B* to void*.

  • If class B is derived directly or indirectly from class A and class C is derived directly or indirectly from B,

    • conversion of C* to B* is better than conversion of C* to A*, [Example:

      struct A {};
      struct B : public A {};
      struct C : public B {};
      C* pc;
      int f(A*);
      int f(B*);
      int i = f(pc);                  // calls f(B*)
      

      end example]

    • binding of an expression of type C to a reference to type B is better than binding an expression of type C to a reference to type A,

    • conversion of A​::​* to B​::​* is better than conversion of A​::​* to C​::​*,

    • conversion of C to B is better than conversion of C to A,

    • conversion of B* to A* is better than conversion of C* to A*,

    • binding of an expression of type B to a reference to type A is better than binding an expression of type C to a reference to type A,

    • conversion of B​::​* to C​::​* is better than conversion of A​::​* to C​::​*, and

    • conversion of B to A is better than conversion of C to A.

    [Note: Compared conversion sequences will have different source types only in the context of comparing the second standard conversion sequence of an initialization by user-defined conversion (see [over.match.best]); in all other contexts, the source types will be the same and the target types will be different. end note]

16.4 Address of overloaded function [over.over]

A use of an overloaded function name without arguments is resolved in certain contexts to a function, a pointer to function or a pointer to member function for a specific function from the overload set. A function template name is considered to name a set of overloaded functions in such contexts. A function with type F is selected for the function type FT of the target type required in the context if F (after possibly applying the function pointer conversion) is identical to FT. [Note: That is, the class of which the function is a member is ignored when matching a pointer-to-member-function type. end note] The target can be

The overloaded function name can be preceded by the & operator. An overloaded function name shall not be used without arguments in contexts other than those listed. [Note: Any redundant set of parentheses surrounding the overloaded function name is ignored ([expr.prim]). end note]

If the name is a function template, template argument deduction is done ([temp.deduct.funcaddr]), and if the argument deduction succeeds, the resulting template argument list is used to generate a single function template specialization, which is added to the set of overloaded functions considered. [Note: As described in [temp.arg.explicit], if deduction fails and the function template name is followed by an explicit template argument list, the template-id is then examined to see whether it identifies a single function template specialization. If it does, the template-id is considered to be an lvalue for that function template specialization. The target type is not used in that determination. end note]

Non-member functions and static member functions match targets of function pointer type or reference to function type. Non-static member functions match targets of pointer to member function type. If a non-static member function is selected, the reference to the overloaded function name is required to have the form of a pointer to member as described in [expr.unary.op].

If more than one function is selected, any function template specializations in the set are eliminated if the set also contains a function that is not a function template specialization, and any given function template specialization F1 is eliminated if the set contains a second function template specialization whose function template is more specialized than the function template of F1 according to the partial ordering rules of [temp.func.order]. After such eliminations, if any, there shall remain exactly one selected function.

[Example:

int f(double);
int f(int);
int (*pfd)(double) = &f;        // selects f(double)
int (*pfi)(int) = &f;           // selects f(int)
int (*pfe)(...) = &f;           // error: type mismatch
int (&rfi)(int) = f;            // selects f(int)
int (&rfd)(double) = f;         // selects f(double)
void g() {
  (int (*)(int))&f;             // cast expression as selector
}

The initialization of pfe is ill-formed because no f() with type int(...) has been declared, and not because of any ambiguity. For another example,

struct X {
  int f(int);
  static int f(long);
};

int (X::*p1)(int)  = &X::f;     // OK
int    (*p2)(int)  = &X::f;     // error: mismatch
int    (*p3)(long) = &X::f;     // OK
int (X::*p4)(long) = &X::f;     // error: mismatch
int (X::*p5)(int)  = &(X::f);   // error: wrong syntax for
                                // pointer to member
int    (*p6)(long) = &(X::f);   // OK

end example]

[Note: If f() and g() are both overloaded functions, the cross product of possibilities must be considered to resolve f(&g), or the equivalent expression f(g). end note]

[Note: Even if B is a public base of D, we have

D* f();
B* (*p1)() = &f;                // error

void g(D*);
void (*p2)(B*) = &g;            // error

end note]

16.5 Overloaded operators [over.oper]

A function declaration having one of the following operator-function-ids as its name declares an operator function. A function template declaration having one of the following operator-function-ids as its name declares an operator function template. A specialization of an operator function template is also an operator function. An operator function is said to implement the operator named in its operator-function-id.

operator-function-id:
	operator operator
operator: one of
	new	delete	new[]	delete[]
	+	-	*	/	%	^	&	|	~
	!	=	<	>	+=	-=	*=	/=	%=
	^=	&=	|=	<<	>>	>>=	<<=	==	!=
	<=	>=	&&	||	++	--	,	->*	->
	()	[]

[Note: The last two operators are function call and subscripting. The operators new[], delete[], (), and [] are formed from more than one token. end note]

Both the unary and binary forms of

+    -    *     &

can be overloaded.

The following operators cannot be overloaded:

.    .*   ::    ?:

nor can the preprocessing symbols # and ## (Clause [cpp]).

Operator functions are usually not called directly; instead they are invoked to evaluate the operators they implement ([over.unary][over.inc]). They can be explicitly called, however, using the operator-function-id as the name of the function in the function call syntax ([expr.call]). [Example:

complex z = a.operator+(b);     // complex z = a+b;
void* p = operator new(sizeof(int)*n);

end example]

The allocation and deallocation functions, operator new, operator new[], operator delete and operator delete​[], are described completely in [basic.stc.dynamic]. The attributes and restrictions found in the rest of this subclause do not apply to them unless explicitly stated in [basic.stc.dynamic].

An operator function shall either be a non-static member function or be a non-member function that has at least one parameter whose type is a class, a reference to a class, an enumeration, or a reference to an enumeration. It is not possible to change the precedence, grouping, or number of operands of operators. The meaning of the operators =, (unary) &, and , (comma), predefined for each type, can be changed for specific class and enumeration types by defining operator functions that implement these operators. Operator functions are inherited in the same manner as other base class functions.

The identities among certain predefined operators applied to basic types (for example, ++a a+=1) need not hold for operator functions. Some predefined operators, such as +=, require an operand to be an lvalue when applied to basic types; this is not required by operator functions.

An operator function cannot have default arguments, except where explicitly stated below. Operator functions cannot have more or fewer parameters than the number required for the corresponding operator, as described in the rest of this subclause.

Operators not mentioned explicitly in subclauses [over.ass] through [over.inc] act as ordinary unary and binary operators obeying the rules of [over.unary] or [over.binary].

16.5.1 Unary operators [over.unary]

A prefix unary operator shall be implemented by a non-static member function ([class.mfct]) with no parameters or a non-member function with one parameter. Thus, for any prefix unary operator @, @x can be interpreted as either x.operator@() or operator@(x). If both forms of the operator function have been declared, the rules in [over.match.oper] determine which, if any, interpretation is used. See [over.inc] for an explanation of the postfix unary operators ++ and --.

The unary and binary forms of the same operator are considered to have the same name. [Note: Consequently, a unary operator can hide a binary operator from an enclosing scope, and vice versa. end note]

16.5.2 Binary operators [over.binary]

A binary operator shall be implemented either by a non-static member function ([class.mfct]) with one parameter or by a non-member function with two parameters. Thus, for any binary operator @, x@y can be interpreted as either x.operator@(y) or operator@(x,y). If both forms of the operator function have been declared, the rules in [over.match.oper] determine which, if any, interpretation is used.

16.5.3 Assignment [over.ass]

An assignment operator shall be implemented by a non-static member function with exactly one parameter. Because a copy assignment operator operator= is implicitly declared for a class if not declared by the user ([class.copy]), a base class assignment operator is always hidden by the copy assignment operator of the derived class.

Any assignment operator, even the copy and move assignment operators, can be virtual. [Note: For a derived class D with a base class B for which a virtual copy/move assignment has been declared, the copy/move assignment operator in D does not override B's virtual copy/move assignment operator. [Example:

struct B {
  virtual int operator= (int);
  virtual B& operator= (const B&);
};
struct D : B {
  virtual int operator= (int);
  virtual D& operator= (const B&);
};

D dobj1;
D dobj2;
B* bptr = &dobj1;
void f() {
  bptr->operator=(99);          // calls D​::​operator=(int)
  *bptr = 99;                   // ditto
  bptr->operator=(dobj2);       // calls D​::​operator=(const B&)
  *bptr = dobj2;                // ditto
  dobj1 = dobj2;                // calls implicitly-declared D​::​operator=(const D&)
}

end example] end note]

16.5.4 Function call [over.call]

operator() shall be a non-static member function with an arbitrary number of parameters. It can have default arguments. It implements the function call syntax

postfix-expression ( expression-listopt )

where the postfix-expression evaluates to a class object and the possibly empty expression-list matches the parameter list of an operator() member function of the class. Thus, a call x(arg1,...) is interpreted as x.operator()(arg1, ...) for a class object x of type T if T​::​operator()(T1, T2, T3) exists and if the operator is selected as the best match function by the overload resolution mechanism ([over.match.best]).

16.5.5 Subscripting [over.sub]

operator[] shall be a non-static member function with exactly one parameter. It implements the subscripting syntax

postfix-expression [ expr-or-braced-init-list ]

Thus, a subscripting expression x[y] is interpreted as x.operator[](y) for a class object x of type T if T​::​operator[](T1) exists and if the operator is selected as the best match function by the overload resolution mechanism ([over.match.best]). [Example:

struct X {
  Z operator[](std::initializer_list<int>);
};
X x;
x[{1,2,3}] = 7;           // OK: meaning x.operator[]({1,2,3})
int a[10];
a[{1,2,3}] = 7;           // error: built-in subscript operator

end example]

16.5.6 Class member access [over.ref]

operator-> shall be a non-static member function taking no parameters. It implements the class member access syntax that uses ->.

postfix-expression -> templateopt id-expression
postfix-expression -> pseudo-destructor-name

An expression x->m is interpreted as (x.operator->())->m for a class object x of type T if T​::​operator->() exists and if the operator is selected as the best match function by the overload resolution mechanism ([over.match]).

16.5.7 Increment and decrement [over.inc]

The user-defined function called operator++ implements the prefix and postfix ++ operator. If this function is a non-static member function with no parameters, or a non-member function with one parameter, it defines the prefix increment operator ++ for objects of that type. If the function is a non-static member function with one parameter (which shall be of type int) or a non-member function with two parameters (the second of which shall be of type int), it defines the postfix increment operator ++ for objects of that type. When the postfix increment is called as a result of using the ++ operator, the int argument will have value zero.134 [Example:

struct X {
  X&   operator++();            // prefix ++a
  X    operator++(int);         // postfix a++
};

struct Y { };
Y&   operator++(Y&);            // prefix ++b
Y    operator++(Y&, int);       // postfix b++

void f(X a, Y b) {
  ++a;                          // a.operator++();
  a++;                          // a.operator++(0);
  ++b;                          // operator++(b);
  b++;                          // operator++(b, 0);

  a.operator++();               // explicit call: like ++a;
  a.operator++(0);              // explicit call: like a++;
  operator++(b);                // explicit call: like ++b;
  operator++(b, 0);             // explicit call: like b++;
}

end example]

The prefix and postfix decrement operators -- are handled analogously.

Calling operator++ explicitly, as in expressions like a.operator++(2), has no special properties: The argument to operator++ is 2.

16.5.8 User-defined literals [over.literal]

literal-operator-id:
	operator string-literal identifier
	operator user-defined-string-literal

The string-literal or user-defined-string-literal in a literal-operator-id shall have no encoding-prefix and shall contain no characters other than the implicit terminating '\0'. The ud-suffix of the user-defined-string-literal or the identifier in a literal-operator-id is called a literal suffix identifier. Some literal suffix identifiers are reserved for future standardization; see [usrlit.suffix]. A declaration whose literal-operator-id uses such a literal suffix identifier is ill-formed, no diagnostic required.

A declaration whose declarator-id is a literal-operator-id shall be a declaration of a namespace-scope function or function template (it could be a friend function), an explicit instantiation or specialization of a function template, or a using-declaration. A function declared with a literal-operator-id is a literal operator. A function template declared with a literal-operator-id is a literal operator template.

The declaration of a literal operator shall have a parameter-declaration-clause equivalent to one of the following:

const char*
unsigned long long int
long double
char
wchar_t
char16_t
char32_t
const char*, std::size_t
const wchar_t*, std::size_t
const char16_t*, std::size_t
const char32_t*, std::size_t

If a parameter has a default argument, the program is ill-formed.

A raw literal operator is a literal operator with a single parameter whose type is const char*.

The declaration of a literal operator template shall have an empty parameter-declaration-clause and its template-parameter-list shall have a single template-parameter that is a non-type template parameter pack with element type char.

Literal operators and literal operator templates shall not have C language linkage.

[Note: Literal operators and literal operator templates are usually invoked implicitly through user-defined literals. However, except for the constraints described above, they are ordinary namespace-scope functions and function templates. In particular, they are looked up like ordinary functions and function templates and they follow the same overload resolution rules. Also, they can be declared inline or constexpr, they may have internal or external linkage, they can be called explicitly, their addresses can be taken, etc. end note]

[Example:

void operator "" _km(long double);                  // OK
string operator "" _i18n(const char*, std::size_t); // OK
template <char...> double operator "" _\u03C0();    // OK: UCN for lowercase pi
float operator ""_e(const char*);                   // OK
float operator ""E(const char*);                    // error: reserved literal suffix ([usrlit.suffix], [lex.ext])
double operator""_Bq(long double);                  // OK: does not use the reserved identifier _­Bq ([lex.name])
double operator"" _Bq(long double);                 // uses the reserved identifier _­Bq ([lex.name])
float operator " " B(const char*);                  // error: non-empty string-literal
string operator "" 5X(const char*, std::size_t);    // error: invalid literal suffix identifier
double operator "" _miles(double);                  // error: invalid parameter-declaration-clause
template <char...> int operator "" _j(const char*); // error: invalid parameter-declaration-clause
extern "C" void operator "" _m(long double);        // error: C language linkage

end example]

16.6 Built-in operators [over.built]

The candidate operator functions that represent the built-in operators defined in Clause [expr] are specified in this subclause. These candidate functions participate in the operator overload resolution process as described in [over.match.oper] and are used for no other purpose. [Note: Because built-in operators take only operands with non-class type, and operator overload resolution occurs only when an operand expression originally has class or enumeration type, operator overload resolution can resolve to a built-in operator only when an operand has a class type that has a user-defined conversion to a non-class type appropriate for the operator, or when an operand has an enumeration type that can be converted to a type appropriate for the operator. Also note that some of the candidate operator functions given in this subclause are more permissive than the built-in operators themselves. As described in [over.match.oper], after a built-in operator is selected by overload resolution the expression is subject to the requirements for the built-in operator given in Clause [expr], and therefore to any additional semantic constraints given there. If there is a user-written candidate with the same name and parameter types as a built-in candidate operator function, the built-in operator function is hidden and is not included in the set of candidate functions. end note]

In this subclause, the term promoted integral type is used to refer to those integral types which are preserved by integral promotion (including e.g. int and long but excluding e.g. char). Similarly, the term promoted arithmetic type refers to floating types plus promoted integral types. [Note: In all cases where a promoted integral type or promoted arithmetic type is required, an operand of enumeration type will be acceptable by way of the integral promotions. end note]

In the remainder of this section, vq represents either volatile or no cv-qualifier.

For every pair (T, vq), where T is an arithmetic type other than bool, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

vq T& operator++(vq T&);
T operator++(vq T&, int);

For every pair (T, vq), where T is an arithmetic type other than bool, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

vq T& operator--(vq T&);
T operator--(vq T&, int);

For every pair (T, vq), where T is a cv-qualified or cv-unqualified object type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T*vq& operator++(T*vq&);
T*vq& operator--(T*vq&);
T*    operator++(T*vq&, int);
T*    operator--(T*vq&, int);

For every cv-qualified or cv-unqualified object type T, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T&    operator*(T*);

For every function type T that does not have cv-qualifiers or a ref-qualifier, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T&    operator*(T*);

For every type T there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T*    operator+(T*);

For every promoted arithmetic type T, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T operator+(T);
T operator-(T);

For every promoted integral type T, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T operator~(T);

For every quintuple (C1, C2, T, cv1, cv2), where C2 is a class type, C1 is the same type as C2 or is a derived class of C2, and T is an object type or a function type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

cv12 T& operator->*(cv1 C1*, cv2 T C2::*);

where cv12 is the union of cv1 and cv2. The return type is shown for exposition only; see [expr.mptr.oper] for the determination of the operator's result type.

For every pair of promoted arithmetic types L and R, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

LR      operator*(L, R);
LR      operator/(L, R);
LR      operator+(L, R);
LR      operator-(L, R);
bool    operator<(L, R);
bool    operator>(L, R);
bool    operator<=(L, R);
bool    operator>=(L, R);
bool    operator==(L, R);
bool    operator!=(L, R);

where LR is the result of the usual arithmetic conversions between types L and R.

For every cv-qualified or cv-unqualified object type T there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T*      operator+(T*, std::ptrdiff_t);
T&      operator[](T*, std::ptrdiff_t);
T*      operator-(T*, std::ptrdiff_t);
T*      operator+(std::ptrdiff_t, T*);
T&      operator[](std::ptrdiff_t, T*);

For every T, where T is a pointer to object type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

std::ptrdiff_t   operator-(T, T);

For every T, where T is an enumeration type or a pointer type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

bool    operator<(T, T);
bool    operator>(T, T);
bool    operator<=(T, T);
bool    operator>=(T, T);
bool    operator==(T, T);
bool    operator!=(T, T);

For every pointer to member type T or type std​::​nullptr_­t there exist candidate operator functions of the form

bool    operator==(T, T);
bool    operator!=(T, T);

For every pair of promoted integral types L and R, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

LR      operator%(L, R);
LR      operator&(L, R);
LR      operator^(L, R);
LR      operator|(L, R);
L       operator<<(L, R);
L       operator>>(L, R);

where LR is the result of the usual arithmetic conversions between types L and R.

For every triple (L, vq, R), where L is an arithmetic type, and R is a promoted arithmetic type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

vq L&   operator=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator*=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator/=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator+=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator-=(vq L&, R);

For every pair (T, vq), where T is any type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T*vq&   operator=(T*vq&, T*);

For every pair (T, vq), where T is an enumeration or pointer to member type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

vq T&   operator=(vq T&, T);

For every pair (T, vq), where T is a cv-qualified or cv-unqualified object type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T*vq&   operator+=(T*vq&, std::ptrdiff_t);
T*vq&   operator-=(T*vq&, std::ptrdiff_t);

For every triple (L, vq, R), where L is an integral type, and R is a promoted integral type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

vq L&   operator%=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator<<=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator>>=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator&=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator^=(vq L&, R);
vq L&   operator|=(vq L&, R);

There also exist candidate operator functions of the form

bool    operator!(bool);
bool    operator&&(bool, bool);
bool    operator||(bool, bool);

For every pair of promoted arithmetic types L and R, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

LR      operator?:(bool, L, R);

where LR is the result of the usual arithmetic conversions between types L and R. [Note: As with all these descriptions of candidate functions, this declaration serves only to describe the built-in operator for purposes of overload resolution. The operator “?:” cannot be overloaded. end note]

For every type T, where T is a pointer, pointer-to-member, or scoped enumeration type, there exist candidate operator functions of the form

T       operator?:(bool, T, T);