13 Templates [temp]

13.10 Function template specializations [temp.fct.spec]

13.10.1 General [temp.fct.spec.general]

A function instantiated from a function template is called a function template specialization; so is an explicit specialization of a function template.
Template arguments can be explicitly specified when naming the function template specialization, deduced from the context (e.g., deduced from the function arguments in a call to the function template specialization, see [temp.deduct]), or obtained from default template arguments.
Each function template specialization instantiated from a template has its own copy of any static variable.
[Example 1: template<class T> void f(T* p) { static T s; }; void g(int a, char* b) { f(&a); // calls f<int>(int*) f(&b); // calls f<char*>(char**) }
Here f<int>(int*) has a static variable s of type int and f<char*>(char**) has a static variable s of type char*.
— end example]

13.10.2 Explicit template argument specification [temp.arg.explicit]

Template arguments can be specified when referring to a function template specialization that is not a specialization of a constructor template by qualifying the function template name with the list of template-arguments in the same way as template-arguments are specified in uses of a class template specialization.
[Example 1: 
template<class T> void sort(Array<T>& v); void f(Array<dcomplex>& cv, Array<int>& ci) { sort<dcomplex>(cv); // sort(Array<dcomplex>&) sort<int>(ci); // sort(Array<int>&) } and template<class U, class V> U convert(V v); void g(double d) { int i = convert<int,double>(d); // int convert(double) char c = convert<char,double>(d); // char convert(double) }
— end example]
Template arguments shall not be specified when referring to a specialization of a constructor template ([class.ctor], [class.qual]).
A template argument list may be specified when referring to a specialization of a function template
  • when a function is called,
  • when the address of a function is taken, when a function initializes a reference to function, or when a pointer to member function is formed,
  • in an explicit specialization,
  • in an explicit instantiation, or
  • in a friend declaration.
Trailing template arguments that can be deduced ([temp.deduct]) or obtained from default template-arguments may be omitted from the list of explicit template-arguments.
[Note 1: 
A trailing template parameter pack ([temp.variadic]) not otherwise deduced will be deduced as an empty sequence of template arguments.
— end note]
If all of the template arguments can be deduced or obtained from default template-arguments, they may all be omitted; in this case, the empty template argument list <> itself may also be omitted.
[Example 2: template<class X, class Y> X f(Y); template<class X, class Y, class ... Z> X g(Y); void h() { int i = f<int>(5.6); // Y deduced as double int j = f(5.6); // error: X cannot be deduced f<void>(f<int, bool>); // Y for outer f deduced as int (*)(bool) f<void>(f<int>); // error: f<int> does not denote a single function template specialization int k = g<int>(5.6); // Y deduced as double; Z deduced as an empty sequence f<void>(g<int, bool>); // Y for outer f deduced as int (*)(bool), // Z deduced as an empty sequence } — end example]
[Note 2: 
An empty template argument list can be used to indicate that a given use refers to a specialization of a function template even when a non-template function ([dcl.fct]) is visible that would otherwise be used.
For example: template <class T> int f(T); // #1 int f(int); // #2 int k = f(1); // uses #2 int l = f<>(1); // uses #1
— end note]
Template arguments that are present shall be specified in the declaration order of their corresponding template-parameters.
The template argument list shall not specify more template-arguments than there are corresponding template-parameters unless one of the template-parameters is a template parameter pack.
[Example 3: template<class X, class Y, class Z> X f(Y,Z); template<class ... Args> void f2(); void g() { f<int,const char*,double>("aa",3.0); f<int,const char*>("aa",3.0); // Z deduced as double f<int>("aa",3.0); // Y deduced as const char*; Z deduced as double f("aa",3.0); // error: X cannot be deduced f2<char, short, int, long>(); // OK } — end example]
Implicit conversions ([conv]) will be performed on a function argument to convert it to the type of the corresponding function parameter if the parameter type contains no template-parameters that participate in template argument deduction.
[Note 3: 
Template parameters do not participate in template argument deduction if they are explicitly specified.
For example,
template<class T> void f(T); class Complex { Complex(double); }; void g() { f<Complex>(1); // OK, means f<Complex>(Complex(1)) } — end note]
[Note 4: 
Because the explicit template argument list follows the function template name, and because constructor templates ([class.ctor]) are named without using a function name ([class.qual]), there is no way to provide an explicit template argument list for these function templates.
— end note]
Template argument deduction can extend the sequence of template arguments corresponding to a template parameter pack, even when the sequence contains explicitly specified template arguments.
[Example 4: template<class ... Types> void f(Types ... values); void g() { f<int*, float*>(0, 0, 0); // Types deduced as the sequence int*, float*, int } — end example]

13.10.3 Template argument deduction [temp.deduct]

13.10.3.1 General [temp.deduct.general]

When a function template specialization is referenced, all of the template arguments shall have values.
The values can be explicitly specified or, in some cases, be deduced from the use or obtained from default template-arguments.
[Example 1: 
void f(Array<dcomplex>& cv, Array<int>& ci) { sort(cv); // calls sort(Array<dcomplex>&) sort(ci); // calls sort(Array<int>&) } and void g(double d) { int i = convert<int>(d); // calls convert<int,double>(double) int c = convert<char>(d); // calls convert<char,double>(double) }
— end example]
When an explicit template argument list is specified, if the given template-id is not valid ([temp.names]), type deduction fails.
Otherwise, the specified template argument values are substituted for the corresponding template parameters as specified below.
After this substitution is performed, the function parameter type adjustments described in [dcl.fct] are performed.
[Example 2: 
A parameter type of “void (const int, int[5])” becomes “void(*)(int,int*).
— end example]
[Note 1: 
A top-level qualifier in a function parameter declaration does not affect the function type but still affects the type of the function parameter variable within the function.
— end note]
[Example 3: template <class T> void f(T t); template <class X> void g(const X x); template <class Z> void h(Z, Z*); int main() { // #1: function type is f(int), t is non const f<int>(1); // #2: function type is f(int), t is const f<const int>(1); // #3: function type is g(int), x is const g<int>(1); // #4: function type is g(int), x is const g<const int>(1); // #5: function type is h(int, const int*) h<const int>(1,0); } — end example]
[Note 2: 
f<int>(1) and f<const int>(1) call distinct functions even though both of the functions called have the same function type.
— end note]
The resulting substituted and adjusted function type is used as the type of the function template for template argument deduction.
If a template argument has not been deduced and its corresponding template parameter has a default argument, the template argument is determined by substituting the template arguments determined for preceding template parameters into the default argument.
If the substitution results in an invalid type, as described above, type deduction fails.
[Example 4: template <class T, class U = double> void f(T t = 0, U u = 0); void g() { f(1, 'c'); // f<int,char>(1,'c') f(1); // f<int,double>(1,0) f(); // error: T cannot be deduced f<int>(); // f<int,double>(0,0) f<int,char>(); // f<int,char>(0,0) } — end example]
When all template arguments have been deduced or obtained from default template arguments, all uses of template parameters in the template parameter list of the template are replaced with the corresponding deduced or default argument values.
If the substitution results in an invalid type, as described above, type deduction fails.
If the function template has associated constraints ([temp.constr.decl]), those constraints are checked for satisfaction ([temp.constr.constr]).
If the constraints are not satisfied, type deduction fails.
In the context of a function call, if type deduction has not yet failed, then for those function parameters for which the function call has arguments, each function parameter with a type that was non-dependent before substitution of any explicitly-specified template arguments is checked against its corresponding argument; if the corresponding argument cannot be implicitly converted to the parameter type, type deduction fails.
[Note 3: 
Overload resolution will check the other parameters, including parameters with dependent types in which no template parameters participate in template argument deduction and parameters that became non-dependent due to substitution of explicitly-specified template arguments.
— end note]
If type deduction has not yet failed, then all uses of template parameters in the function type are replaced with the corresponding deduced or default argument values.
If the substitution results in an invalid type, as described above, type deduction fails.
[Example 5: template <class T> struct Z { typedef typename T::x xx; }; template <class T> concept C = requires { typename T::A; }; template <C T> typename Z<T>::xx f(void *, T); // #1 template <class T> void f(int, T); // #2 struct A {} a; struct ZZ { template <class T, class = typename Z<T>::xx> operator T *(); operator int(); }; int main() { ZZ zz; f(1, a); // OK, deduction fails for #1 because there is no conversion from int to void* f(zz, 42); // OK, deduction fails for #1 because C<int> is not satisfied } — end example]
At certain points in the template argument deduction process it is necessary to take a function type that makes use of template parameters and replace those template parameters with the corresponding template arguments.
This is done at the beginning of template argument deduction when any explicitly specified template arguments are substituted into the function type, and again at the end of template argument deduction when any template arguments that were deduced or obtained from default arguments are substituted.
The deduction substitution loci are
The substitution occurs in all types and expressions that are used in the deduction substitution loci.
The expressions include not only constant expressions such as those that appear in array bounds or as nontype template arguments but also general expressions (i.e., non-constant expressions) inside sizeof, decltype, and other contexts that allow non-constant expressions.
The substitution proceeds in lexical order and stops when a condition that causes deduction to fail is encountered.
If substitution into different declarations of the same function template would cause template instantiations to occur in a different order or not at all, the program is ill-formed; no diagnostic required.
[Note 4: 
The equivalent substitution in exception specifications is done only when the noexcept-specifier is instantiated, at which point a program is ill-formed if the substitution results in an invalid type or expression.
— end note]
[Example 6: template <class T> struct A { using X = typename T::X; }; template <class T> typename T::X f(typename A<T>::X); template <class T> void f(...) { } template <class T> auto g(typename A<T>::X) -> typename T::X; template <class T> void g(...) { } template <class T> typename T::X h(typename A<T>::X); template <class T> auto h(typename A<T>::X) -> typename T::X; // redeclaration template <class T> void h(...) { } void x() { f<int>(0); // OK, substituting return type causes deduction to fail g<int>(0); // error, substituting parameter type instantiates A<int> h<int>(0); // ill-formed, no diagnostic required } — end example]
If a substitution results in an invalid type or expression, type deduction fails.
An invalid type or expression is one that would be ill-formed, with a diagnostic required, if written in the same context using the substituted arguments.
[Note 5: 
If no diagnostic is required, the program is still ill-formed.
Access checking is done as part of the substitution process.
— end note]
Invalid types and expressions can result in a deduction failure only in the immediate context of the deduction substitution loci.
[Note 6: 
The substitution into types and expressions can result in effects such as the instantiation of class template specializations and/or function template specializations, the generation of implicitly-defined functions, etc.
Such effects are not in the “immediate context” and can result in the program being ill-formed.
— end note]
A lambda-expression appearing in a function type or a template parameter is not considered part of the immediate context for the purposes of template argument deduction.
[Note 7: 
The intent is to avoid requiring implementations to deal with substitution failure involving arbitrary statements.
[Example 7: template <class T> auto f(T) -> decltype([]() { T::invalid; } ()); void f(...); f(0); // error: invalid expression not part of the immediate context template <class T, std::size_t = sizeof([]() { T::invalid; })> void g(T); void g(...); g(0); // error: invalid expression not part of the immediate context template <class T> auto h(T) -> decltype([x = T::invalid]() { }); void h(...); h(0); // error: invalid expression not part of the immediate context template <class T> auto i(T) -> decltype([]() -> typename T::invalid { }); void i(...); i(0); // error: invalid expression not part of the immediate context template <class T> auto j(T t) -> decltype([](auto x) -> decltype(x.invalid) { } (t)); // #1 void j(...); // #2 j(0); // deduction fails on #1, calls #2 — end example]
— end note]
[Example 8: struct X { }; struct Y { Y(X) {} }; template <class T> auto f(T t1, T t2) -> decltype(t1 + t2); // #1 X f(Y, Y); // #2 X x1, x2; X x3 = f(x1, x2); // deduction fails on #1 (cannot add X+X), calls #2 — end example]
[Note 8: 
Type deduction can fail for the following reasons:
  • Attempting to instantiate a pack expansion containing multiple packs of differing lengths.
  • Attempting to create an array with an element type that is void, a function type, or a reference type, or attempting to create an array with a size that is zero or negative.
    [Example 9: template <class T> int f(T[5]); int I = f<int>(0); int j = f<void>(0); // invalid array — end example]
  • Attempting to use a type that is not a class or enumeration type in a qualified name.
    [Example 10: template <class T> int f(typename T::B*); int i = f<int>(0); — end example]
  • Attempting to use a type in a nested-name-specifier of a qualified-id when that type does not contain the specified member, or
    • the specified member is not a type where a type is required, or
    • the specified member is not a template where a template is required, or
    • the specified member is not a non-type where a non-type is required.
    [Example 11: template <int I> struct X { }; template <template <class T> class> struct Z { }; template <class T> void f(typename T::Y*) {} template <class T> void g(X<T::N>*) {} template <class T> void h(Z<T::TT>*) {} struct A {}; struct B { int Y; }; struct C { typedef int N; }; struct D { typedef int TT; }; int main() { // Deduction fails in each of these cases: f<A>(0); // A does not contain a member Y f<B>(0); // The Y member of B is not a type g<C>(0); // The N member of C is not a non-type h<D>(0); // The TT member of D is not a template } — end example]
  • Attempting to create a pointer to reference type.
  • Attempting to create a reference to void.
  • Attempting to create “pointer to member of T” when T is not a class type.
    [Example 12: template <class T> int f(int T::*); int i = f<int>(0); — end example]
  • Attempting to give an invalid type to a non-type template parameter.
    [Example 13: template <class T, T> struct S {}; template <class T> int f(S<T, T{}>*); // #1 class X { int m; }; int i0 = f<X>(0); // #1 uses a value of non-structural type X as a non-type template argument — end example]
  • Attempting to perform an invalid conversion in either a template argument expression, or an expression used in the function declaration.
    [Example 14: template <class T, T*> int f(int); int i2 = f<int,1>(0); // can't convert 1 to int* — end example]
  • Attempting to create a function type in which a parameter has a type of void, or in which the return type is a function type or array type.
— end note]
[Example 15: 
In the following example, assuming a signed char cannot represent the value 1000, a narrowing conversion would be required to convert the template-argument of type int to signed char, therefore substitution fails for the second template ([temp.arg.nontype]).
template <int> int f(int); template <signed char> int f(int); int i1 = f<1000>(0); // OK int i2 = f<1>(0); // ambiguous; not narrowing — end example]

13.10.3.2 Deducing template arguments from a function call [temp.deduct.call]

Template argument deduction is done by comparing each function template parameter type (call it P) that contains template-parameters that participate in template argument deduction with the type of the corresponding argument of the call (call it A) as described below.
If removing references and cv-qualifiers from P gives or for some and N and the argument is a non-empty initializer list ([dcl.init.list]), then deduction is performed instead for each element of the initializer list independently, taking as separate function template parameter types and the initializer element as the corresponding argument.
In the case, if N is a non-type template parameter, N is deduced from the length of the initializer list.
Otherwise, an initializer list argument causes the parameter to be considered a non-deduced context ([temp.deduct.type]).
[Example 1: template<class T> void f(std::initializer_list<T>); f({1,2,3}); // T deduced as int f({1,"asdf"}); // error: T deduced as both int and const char* template<class T> void g(T); g({1,2,3}); // error: no argument deduced for T template<class T, int N> void h(T const(&)[N]); h({1,2,3}); // T deduced as int; N deduced as 3 template<class T> void j(T const(&)[3]); j({42}); // T deduced as int; array bound not considered struct Aggr { int i; int j; }; template<int N> void k(Aggr const(&)[N]); k({1,2,3}); // error: deduction fails, no conversion from int to Aggr k({{1},{2},{3}}); // OK, N deduced as 3 template<int M, int N> void m(int const(&)[M][N]); m({{1,2},{3,4}}); // M and N both deduced as 2 template<class T, int N> void n(T const(&)[N], T); n({{1},{2},{3}},Aggr()); // OK, T is Aggr, N is 3 template<typename T, int N> void o(T (* const (&)[N])(T)) { } int f1(int); int f4(int); char f4(char); o({ &f1, &f4 }); // OK, T deduced as int from first element, nothing // deduced from second element, N deduced as 2 o({ &f1, static_cast<char(*)(char)>(&f4) }); // error: conflicting deductions for T — end example]
For a function parameter pack that occurs at the end of the parameter-declaration-list, deduction is performed for each remaining argument of the call, taking the type P of the declarator-id of the function parameter pack as the corresponding function template parameter type.
Each deduction deduces template arguments for subsequent positions in the template parameter packs expanded by the function parameter pack.
When a function parameter pack appears in a non-deduced context ([temp.deduct.type]), the type of that pack is never deduced.
[Example 2: template<class ... Types> void f(Types& ...); template<class T1, class ... Types> void g(T1, Types ...); template<class T1, class ... Types> void g1(Types ..., T1); void h(int x, float& y) { const int z = x; f(x, y, z); // Types deduced as int, float, const int g(x, y, z); // T1 deduced as int; Types deduced as float, int g1(x, y, z); // error: Types is not deduced g1<int, int, int>(x, y, z); // OK, no deduction occurs } — end example]
If P is not a reference type:
If P is a cv-qualified type, the top-level cv-qualifiers of P's type are ignored for type deduction.
If P is a reference type, the type referred to by P is used for type deduction.
[Example 3: template<class T> int f(const T&); int n1 = f(5); // calls f<int>(const int&) const int i = 0; int n2 = f(i); // calls f<int>(const int&) template <class T> int g(volatile T&); int n3 = g(i); // calls g<const int>(const volatile int&) — end example]
A forwarding reference is an rvalue reference to a cv-unqualified template parameter that does not represent a template parameter of a class template (during class template argument deduction ([over.match.class.deduct])).
If P is a forwarding reference and the argument is an lvalue, the type “lvalue reference to A” is used in place of A for type deduction.
[Example 4: template <class T> int f(T&& heisenreference); template <class T> int g(const T&&); int i; int n1 = f(i); // calls f<int&>(int&) int n2 = f(0); // calls f<int>(int&&) int n3 = g(i); // error: would call g<int>(const int&&), which // would bind an rvalue reference to an lvalue template <class T> struct A { template <class U> A(T&&, U&&, int*); // #1: T&& is not a forwarding reference. // U&& is a forwarding reference. A(T&&, int*); // #2 }; template <class T> A(T&&, int*) -> A<T>; // #3: T&& is a forwarding reference. int *ip; A a{i, 0, ip}; // error: cannot deduce from #1 A a0{0, 0, ip}; // uses #1 to deduce A<int> and #1 to initialize A a2{i, ip}; // uses #3 to deduce A<int&> and #2 to initialize — end example]
In general, the deduction process attempts to find template argument values that will make the deduced A identical to A (after the type A is transformed as described above).
However, there are three cases that allow a difference:
  • If the original P is a reference type, the deduced A (i.e., the type referred to by the reference) can be more cv-qualified than the transformed A.
  • The transformed A can be another pointer or pointer-to-member type that can be converted to the deduced A via a function pointer conversion and/or qualification conversion.
  • If P is a class and P has the form simple-template-id, then the transformed A can be a derived class D of the deduced A.
    Likewise, if P is a pointer to a class of the form simple-template-id, the transformed A can be a pointer to a derived class D pointed to by the deduced A.
    However, if there is a class C that is a (direct or indirect) base class of D and derived (directly or indirectly) from a class B and that would be a valid deduced A, the deduced A cannot be B or pointer to B, respectively.
    [Example 5: template <typename... T> struct X; template <> struct X<> {}; template <typename T, typename... Ts> struct X<T, Ts...> : X<Ts...> {}; struct D : X<int> {}; struct E : X<>, X<int> {}; template <typename... T> int f(const X<T...>&); int x = f(D()); // calls f<int>, not f<> // B is X<>, C is X<int> int z = f(E()); // calls f<int>, not f<> — end example]
These alternatives are considered only if type deduction would otherwise fail.
If they yield more than one possible deduced A, the type deduction fails.
[Note 1: 
If a template-parameter is not used in any of the function parameters of a function template, or is used only in a non-deduced context, its corresponding template-argument cannot be deduced from a function call and the template-argument must be explicitly specified.
— end note]
When P is a function type, function pointer type, or pointer-to-member-function type:
  • If the argument is an overload set containing one or more function templates, the parameter is treated as a non-deduced context.
  • If the argument is an overload set (not containing function templates), trial argument deduction is attempted using each of the members of the set.
    If deduction succeeds for only one of the overload set members, that member is used as the argument value for the deduction.
    If deduction succeeds for more than one member of the overload set the parameter is treated as a non-deduced context.
[Example 6: // Only one function of an overload set matches the call so the function parameter is a deduced context. template <class T> int f(T (*p)(T)); int g(int); int g(char); int i = f(g); // calls f(int (*)(int)) — end example]
[Example 7: // Ambiguous deduction causes the second function parameter to be a non-deduced context. template <class T> int f(T, T (*p)(T)); int g(int); char g(char); int i = f(1, g); // calls f(int, int (*)(int)) — end example]
[Example 8: // The overload set contains a template, causing the second function parameter to be a non-deduced context. template <class T> int f(T, T (*p)(T)); char g(char); template <class T> T g(T); int i = f(1, g); // calls f(int, int (*)(int)) — end example]

13.10.3.3 Deducing template arguments taking the address of a function template [temp.deduct.funcaddr]

Template arguments can be deduced from the type specified when taking the address of an overload set.
If there is a target, the function template's function type and the target type are used as the types of P and A, and the deduction is done as described in [temp.deduct.type].
Otherwise, deduction is performed with empty sets of types P and A.
A placeholder type in the return type of a function template is a non-deduced context.
If template argument deduction succeeds for such a function, the return type is determined from instantiation of the function body.

13.10.3.4 Deducing conversion function template arguments [temp.deduct.conv]

Template argument deduction is done by comparing the return type of the conversion function template (call it P) with the type specified by the conversion-type-id of the conversion-function-id being looked up (call it A) as described in [temp.deduct.type].
If the conversion-function-id is constructed during overload resolution ([over.match.funcs]), the rules in the remainder of this subclause apply.
If P is a reference type, the type referred to by P is used in place of P for type deduction and for any further references to or transformations of P in the remainder of this subclause.
If A is not a reference type:
If A is a cv-qualified type, the top-level cv-qualifiers of A's type are ignored for type deduction.
If A is a reference type, the type referred to by A is used for type deduction.
In general, the deduction process attempts to find template argument values that will make the deduced A identical to A.
However, certain attributes of A may be ignored:
  • If the original A is a reference type, any cv-qualifiers of A (i.e., the type referred to by the reference).
  • If the original A is a function pointer or pointer-to-member-function type with a potentially-throwing exception specification ([except.spec]), the exception specification.
  • Any cv-qualifiers in A that can be restored by a qualification conversion.
These attributes are ignored only if type deduction would otherwise fail.
If ignoring them allows more than one possible deduced A, the type deduction fails.

13.10.3.5 Deducing template arguments during partial ordering [temp.deduct.partial]

Template argument deduction is done by comparing certain types associated with the two function templates being compared.
Two sets of types are used to determine the partial ordering.
For each of the templates involved there is the original function type and the transformed function type.
[Note 1: 
The creation of the transformed type is described in [temp.func.order].
— end note]
The deduction process uses the transformed type as the argument template and the original type of the other template as the parameter template.
This process is done twice for each type involved in the partial ordering comparison: once using the transformed template-1 as the argument template and template-2 as the parameter template and again using the transformed template-2 as the argument template and template-1 as the parameter template.
The types used to determine the ordering depend on the context in which the partial ordering is done:
  • In the context of a function call, the types used are those function parameter types for which the function call has arguments.127
  • In the context of a call to a conversion function, the return types of the conversion function templates are used.
  • In other contexts the function template's function type is used.
Each type nominated above from the parameter template and the corresponding type from the argument template are used as the types of P and A.
Before the partial ordering is done, certain transformations are performed on the types used for partial ordering:
  • If P is a reference type, P is replaced by the type referred to.
  • If A is a reference type, A is replaced by the type referred to.
If both P and A were reference types (before being replaced with the type referred to above), determine which of the two types (if any) is more cv-qualified than the other; otherwise the types are considered to be equally cv-qualified for partial ordering purposes.
The result of this determination will be used below.
Remove any top-level cv-qualifiers:
  • If P is a cv-qualified type, P is replaced by the cv-unqualified version of P.
  • If A is a cv-qualified type, A is replaced by the cv-unqualified version of A.
Using the resulting types P and A, the deduction is then done as described in [temp.deduct.type].
If P is a function parameter pack, the type A of each remaining parameter type of the argument template is compared with the type P of the declarator-id of the function parameter pack.
Each comparison deduces template arguments for subsequent positions in the template parameter packs expanded by the function parameter pack.
Similarly, if A was transformed from a function parameter pack, it is compared with each remaining parameter type of the parameter template.
If deduction succeeds for a given type, the type from the argument template is considered to be at least as specialized as the type from the parameter template.
[Example 1: template<class... Args> void f(Args... args); // #1 template<class T1, class... Args> void f(T1 a1, Args... args); // #2 template<class T1, class T2> void f(T1 a1, T2 a2); // #3 f(); // calls #1 f(1, 2, 3); // calls #2 f(1, 2); // calls #3; non-variadic template #3 is more specialized // than the variadic templates #1 and #2 — end example]
If, for a given type, the types are identical after the transformations above and both P and A were reference types (before being replaced with the type referred to above):
  • if the type from the argument template was an lvalue reference and the type from the parameter template was not, the parameter type is not considered to be at least as specialized as the argument type; otherwise,
  • if the type from the argument template is more cv-qualified than the type from the parameter template (as described above), the parameter type is not considered to be at least as specialized as the argument type.
Function template F is at least as specialized as function template G if, for each pair of types used to determine the ordering, the type from F is at least as specialized as the type from G.
F is more specialized than G if F is at least as specialized as G and G is not at least as specialized as F.
If, after considering the above, function template F is at least as specialized as function template G and vice-versa, and if G has a trailing function parameter pack for which F does not have a corresponding parameter, and if F does not have a trailing function parameter pack, then F is more specialized than G.
In most cases, deduction fails if not all template parameters have values, but for partial ordering purposes a template parameter may remain without a value provided it is not used in the types being used for partial ordering.
[Note 2: 
A template parameter used in a non-deduced context is considered used.
— end note]
[Example 2: template <class T> T f(int); // #1 template <class T, class U> T f(U); // #2 void g() { f<int>(1); // calls #1 } — end example]
[Note 3: 
Partial ordering of function templates containing template parameter packs is independent of the number of deduced arguments for those template parameter packs.
— end note]
[Example 3: template<class ...> struct Tuple { }; template<class ... Types> void g(Tuple<Types ...>); // #1 template<class T1, class ... Types> void g(Tuple<T1, Types ...>); // #2 template<class T1, class ... Types> void g(Tuple<T1, Types& ...>); // #3 g(Tuple<>()); // calls #1 g(Tuple<int, float>()); // calls #2 g(Tuple<int, float&>()); // calls #3 g(Tuple<int>()); // calls #3 — end example]
127)127)
Default arguments are not considered to be arguments in this context; they only become arguments after a function has been selected.

13.10.3.6 Deducing template arguments from a type [temp.deduct.type]

Template arguments can be deduced in several different contexts, but in each case a type that is specified in terms of template parameters (call it P) is compared with an actual type (call it A), and an attempt is made to find template argument values (a type for a type parameter, a value for a non-type parameter, or a template for a template parameter) that will make P, after substitution of the deduced values (call it the deduced A), compatible with A.
In some cases, the deduction is done using a single set of types P and A, in other cases, there will be a set of corresponding types P and A.
Type deduction is done independently for each P/A pair, and the deduced template argument values are then combined.
If type deduction cannot be done for any P/A pair, or if for any pair the deduction leads to more than one possible set of deduced values, or if different pairs yield different deduced values, or if any template argument remains neither deduced nor explicitly specified, template argument deduction fails.
The type of a type parameter is only deduced from an array bound if it is not otherwise deduced.
A given type P can be composed from a number of other types, templates, and non-type values:
  • A function type includes the types of each of the function parameters, the return type, and its exception specification.
  • A pointer-to-member type includes the type of the class object pointed to and the type of the member pointed to.
  • A type that is a specialization of a class template (e.g., A<int>) includes the types, templates, and non-type values referenced by the template argument list of the specialization.
  • An array type includes the array element type and the value of the array bound.
In most cases, the types, templates, and non-type values that are used to compose P participate in template argument deduction.
That is, they may be used to determine the value of a template argument, and template argument deduction fails if the value so determined is not consistent with the values determined elsewhere.
In certain contexts, however, the value does not participate in type deduction, but instead uses the values of template arguments that were either deduced elsewhere or explicitly specified.
If a template parameter is used only in non-deduced contexts and is not explicitly specified, template argument deduction fails.
[Note 1: 
Under [temp.deduct.call], if P contains no template-parameters that appear in deduced contexts, no deduction is done, so P and A need not have the same form.
— end note]
The non-deduced contexts are:
  • The nested-name-specifier of a type that was specified using a qualified-id.
  • A non-type template argument or an array bound in which a subexpression references a template parameter.
  • A template parameter used in the parameter type of a function parameter that has a default argument that is being used in the call for which argument deduction is being done.
  • A function parameter for which the associated argument is an overload set ([over.over]), and one or more of the following apply:
    • more than one function matches the function parameter type (resulting in an ambiguous deduction), or
    • no function matches the function parameter type, or
    • the overload set supplied as an argument contains one or more function templates.
  • A function parameter for which the associated argument is an initializer list ([dcl.init.list]) but the parameter does not have a type for which deduction from an initializer list is specified ([temp.deduct.call]).
    [Example 1: template<class T> void g(T); g({1,2,3}); // error: no argument deduced for T — end example]
  • A function parameter pack that does not occur at the end of the parameter-declaration-list.
When a type name is specified in a way that includes a non-deduced context, all of the types that comprise that type name are also non-deduced.
However, a compound type can include both deduced and non-deduced types.
[Example 2: 
If a type is specified as A<T>​::​B<T2>, both T and T2 are non-deduced.
Likewise, if a type is specified as A<I+J>​::​X<T>, I, J, and T are non-deduced.
If a type is specified as void f(typename A<T>​::​B, A<T>), the T in A<T>​::​B is non-deduced but the T in A<T> is deduced.
— end example]
[Example 3: 
Here is an example in which different parameter/argument pairs produce inconsistent template argument deductions: template<class T> void f(T x, T y) { /* ... */ } struct A { /* ... */ }; struct B : A { /* ... */ }; void g(A a, B b) { f(a,b); // error: T deduced as both A and B f(b,a); // error: T deduced as both A and B f(a,a); // OK, T is A f(b,b); // OK, T is B }
Here is an example where two template arguments are deduced from a single function parameter/argument pair.
This can lead to conflicts that cause type deduction to fail: template <class T, class U> void f( T (*)( T, U, U ) ); int g1( int, float, float); char g2( int, float, float); int g3( int, char, float); void r() { f(g1); // OK, T is int and U is float f(g2); // error: T deduced as both char and int f(g3); // error: U deduced as both char and float }
Here is an example where the exception specification of a function type is deduced:
template<bool E> void f1(void (*)() noexcept(E)); template<bool> struct A { }; template<bool B> void f2(void (*)(A<B>) noexcept(B)); void g1(); void g2() noexcept; void g3(A<true>); void h() { f1(g1); // OK, E is false f1(g2); // OK, E is true f2(g3); // error: B deduced as both true and false }
Here is an example where a qualification conversion applies between the argument type on the function call and the deduced template argument type: template<class T> void f(const T*) { } int* p; void s() { f(p); // f(const int*) }
Here is an example where the template argument is used to instantiate a derived class type of the corresponding function parameter type: template <class T> struct B { }; template <class T> struct D : public B<T> {}; struct D2 : public B<int> {}; template <class T> void f(B<T>&) {} void t() { D<int> d; D2 d2; f(d); // calls f(B<int>&) f(d2); // calls f(B<int>&) }
— end example]
A template type argument T, a template template argument TT, or a template non-type argument i can be deduced if P and A have one of the following forms: cv T T* T& T&& T[i] T(T) noexcept(i) T T::* TT<T> TT<i> TT<TT> TT<> where
  • T represents a type or parameter-type-list that either satisfies these rules recursively, is a non-deduced context in P or A, or is the same non-dependent type in P and A,
  • TT represents either a class template or a template template parameter,
  • i represents an expression that either is an i, is value-dependent in P or A, or has the same constant value in P and A, and
  • noexcept(i) represents an exception specification ([except.spec]) in which the (possibly-implicit, see [dcl.fct]) noexcept-specifier's operand satisfies the rules for an i above.
[Note 2: 
If a type matches such a form but contains no Ts, is, or TTs, deduction is not possible.
— end note]
Similarly, <T> represents template argument lists where at least one argument contains a T, <i> represents template argument lists where at least one argument contains an i and <> represents template argument lists where no argument contains a T or an i.
If P has a form that contains <T> or <i>, then each argument of the respective template argument list of P is compared with the corresponding argument of the corresponding template argument list of A.
If the template argument list of P contains a pack expansion that is not the last template argument, the entire template argument list is a non-deduced context.
If is a pack expansion, then the pattern of is compared with each remaining argument in the template argument list of A.
Each comparison deduces template arguments for subsequent positions in the template parameter packs expanded by .
During partial ordering, if was originally a pack expansion:
  • if P does not contain a template argument corresponding to then is ignored;
  • otherwise, if is not a pack expansion, template argument deduction fails.
[Example 4: template<class T1, class... Z> class S; // #1 template<class T1, class... Z> class S<T1, const Z&...> { }; // #2 template<class T1, class T2> class S<T1, const T2&> { }; // #3 S<int, const int&> s; // both #2 and #3 match; #3 is more specialized template<class T, class... U> struct A { }; // #1 template<class T1, class T2, class... U> struct A<T1, T2*, U...> { }; // #2 template<class T1, class T2> struct A<T1, T2> { }; // #3 template struct A<int, int*>; // selects #2 — end example]
Similarly, if P has a form that contains (T), then each parameter type of the respective parameter-type-list ([dcl.fct]) of P is compared with the corresponding parameter type of the corresponding parameter-type-list of A.
If P and A are function types that originated from deduction when taking the address of a function template ([temp.deduct.funcaddr]) or when deducing template arguments from a function declaration ([temp.deduct.decl]) and and are parameters of the top-level parameter-type-list of P and A, respectively, is adjusted if it is a forwarding reference ([temp.deduct.call]) and is an lvalue reference, in which case the type of is changed to be the template parameter type (i.e., T&& is changed to simply T).
[Note 3: 
As a result, when is T&& and is X&, the adjusted will be T, causing T to be deduced as X&.
— end note]
[Example 5: template <class T> void f(T&&); template <> void f(int&) { } // #1 template <> void f(int&&) { } // #2 void g(int i) { f(i); // calls f<int&>(int&), i.e., #1 f(0); // calls f<int>(int&&), i.e., #2 } — end example]
If the parameter-declaration corresponding to is a function parameter pack, then the type of its declarator-id is compared with each remaining parameter type in the parameter-type-list of A.
Each comparison deduces template arguments for subsequent positions in the template parameter packs expanded by the function parameter pack.
During partial ordering, if was originally a function parameter pack:
  • if P does not contain a function parameter type corresponding to then is ignored;
  • otherwise, if is not a function parameter pack, template argument deduction fails.
[Example 6: template<class T, class... U> void f(T*, U...) { } // #1 template<class T> void f(T) { } // #2 template void f(int*); // selects #1 — end example]
These forms can be used in the same way as T is for further composition of types.
[Example 7: 
X<int> (*)(char[6]) is of the form template-name<T> (*)(type[i]) which is a variant of type (*)(T) where type is X<int> and T is char[6].
— end example]
Template arguments cannot be deduced from function arguments involving constructs other than the ones specified above.
When the value of the argument corresponding to a non-type template parameter P that is declared with a dependent type is deduced from an expression, the template parameters in the type of P are deduced from the type of the value.
[Example 8: template<long n> struct A { }; template<typename T> struct C; template<typename T, T n> struct C<A<n>> { using Q = T; }; using R = long; using R = C<A<2>>::Q; // OK; T was deduced as long from the // template argument value in the type A<2> — end example]
The type of N in the type T[N] is std​::​size_t.
[Example 9: template<typename T> struct S; template<typename T, T n> struct S<int[n]> { using Q = T; }; using V = decltype(sizeof 0); using V = S<int[42]>::Q; // OK; T was deduced as std​::​size_t from the type int[42] — end example]
The type of B in the noexcept-specifier noexcept(B) of a function type is bool.
[Example 10: template<bool> struct A { }; template<auto> struct B; template<auto X, void (*F)() noexcept(X)> struct B<F> { A<X> ax; }; void f_nothrow() noexcept; B<f_nothrow> bn; // OK, type of X deduced as bool — end example]
[Example 11: template<class T, T i> void f(int (&a)[i]); int v[10]; void g() { f(v); // OK, T is std​::​size_t } — end example]
[Note 4: 
Except for reference and pointer types, a major array bound is not part of a function parameter type and cannot be deduced from an argument: template<int i> void f1(int a[10][i]); template<int i> void f2(int a[i][20]); template<int i> void f3(int (&a)[i][20]); void g() { int v[10][20]; f1(v); // OK, i deduced as 20 f1<20>(v); // OK f2(v); // error: cannot deduce template-argument i f2<10>(v); // OK f3(v); // OK, i deduced as 10 }
— end note]
[Note 5: 
If, in the declaration of a function template with a non-type template parameter, the non-type template parameter is used in a subexpression in the function parameter list, the expression is a non-deduced context as specified above.
[Example 12: template <int i> class A { /* ... */ }; template <int i> void g(A<i+1>); template <int i> void f(A<i>, A<i+1>); void k() { A<1> a1; A<2> a2; g(a1); // error: deduction fails for expression i+1 g<0>(a1); // OK f(a1, a2); // OK } — end example]
— end note]
[Note 6: 
Template parameters do not participate in template argument deduction if they are used only in non-deduced contexts.
For example,
template<int i, typename T> T deduce(typename A<T>::X x, // T is not deduced here T t, // but T is deduced here typename B<i>::Y y); // i is not deduced here A<int> a; B<77> b; int x = deduce<77>(a.xm, 62, b.ym); // T deduced as int; a.xm must be convertible to A<int>​::​X // i is explicitly specified to be 77; b.ym must be convertible to B<77>​::​Y — end note]
If P has a form that contains <i>, and if the type of i differs from the type of the corresponding template parameter of the template named by the enclosing simple-template-id, deduction fails.
If P has a form that contains [i], and if the type of i is not an integral type, deduction fails.128
If P has a form that includes noexcept(i) and the type of i is not bool, deduction fails.
[Example 13: template<int i> class A { /* ... */ }; template<short s> void f(A<s>); void k1() { A<1> a; f(a); // error: deduction fails for conversion from int to short f<1>(a); // OK } template<const short cs> class B { }; template<short s> void g(B<s>); void k2() { B<1> b; g(b); // OK, cv-qualifiers are ignored on template parameter types } — end example]
A template-argument can be deduced from a function, pointer to function, or pointer-to-member-function type.
[Example 14: template<class T> void f(void(*)(T,int)); template<class T> void foo(T,int); void g(int,int); void g(char,int); void h(int,int,int); void h(char,int); int m() { f(&g); // error: ambiguous f(&h); // OK, void h(char,int) is a unique match f(&foo); // error: type deduction fails because foo is a template } — end example]
A template type-parameter cannot be deduced from the type of a function default argument.
[Example 15: template <class T> void f(T = 5, T = 7); void g() { f(1); // OK, calls f<int>(1,7) f(); // error: cannot deduce T f<int>(); // OK, calls f<int>(5,7) } — end example]
The template-argument corresponding to a template template-parameter is deduced from the type of the template-argument of a class template specialization used in the argument list of a function call.
[Example 16: template <template <class T> class X> struct A { }; template <template <class T> class X> void f(A<X>) { } template<class T> struct B { }; A<B> ab; f(ab); // calls f(A<B>) — end example]
[Note 7: 
Template argument deduction involving parameter packs ([temp.variadic]) can deduce zero or more arguments for each parameter pack.
— end note]
[Example 17: template<class> struct X { }; template<class R, class ... ArgTypes> struct X<R(int, ArgTypes ...)> { }; template<class ... Types> struct Y { }; template<class T, class ... Types> struct Y<T, Types& ...> { }; template<class ... Types> int f(void (*)(Types ...)); void g(int, float); X<int> x1; // uses primary template X<int(int, float, double)> x2; // uses partial specialization; ArgTypes contains float, double X<int(float, int)> x3; // uses primary template Y<> y1; // uses primary template; Types is empty Y<int&, float&, double&> y2; // uses partial specialization; T is int&, Types contains float, double Y<int, float, double> y3; // uses primary template; Types contains int, float, double int fv = f(g); // OK; Types contains int, float — end example]
128)128)
Although the template-argument corresponding to a template-parameter of type bool can be deduced from an array bound, the resulting value will always be true because the array bound will be nonzero.

13.10.3.7 Deducing template arguments from a function declaration [temp.deduct.decl]

In a declaration whose declarator-id refers to a specialization of a function template, template argument deduction is performed to identify the specialization to which the declaration refers.
Specifically, this is done for explicit instantiations, explicit specializations, and certain friend declarations.
This is also done to determine whether a deallocation function template specialization matches a placement operator new ([basic.stc.dynamic.deallocation], [expr.new]).
In all these cases, P is the type of the function template being considered as a potential match and A is either the function type from the declaration or the type of the deallocation function that would match the placement operator new as described in [expr.new].
The deduction is done as described in [temp.deduct.type].
If, for the set of function templates so considered, there is either no match or more than one match after partial ordering has been considered ([temp.func.order]), deduction fails and, in the declaration cases, the program is ill-formed.

13.10.4 Overload resolution [temp.over]

When a call of a function or function template is written (explicitly, or implicitly using the operator notation), template argument deduction ([temp.deduct]) and checking of any explicit template arguments ([temp.arg]) are performed for each function template to find the template argument values (if any) that can be used with that function template to instantiate a function template specialization that can be invoked with the call arguments or, for conversion function templates, that can convert to the required type.
For each function template, if the argument deduction and checking succeeds, the template-arguments (deduced and/or explicit) are used to synthesize the declaration of a single function template specialization which is added to the candidate functions set to be used in overload resolution.
If, for a given function template, argument deduction fails or the synthesized function template specialization would be ill-formed, no such function is added to the set of candidate functions for that template.
The complete set of candidate functions includes all the synthesized declarations and all of the non-template functions found by name lookup.
The synthesized declarations are treated like any other functions in the remainder of overload resolution, except as explicitly noted in [over.match.best].129
[Example 1: template<class T> T max(T a, T b) { return a>b?a:b; } void f(int a, int b, char c, char d) { int m1 = max(a,b); // max(int a, int b) char m2 = max(c,d); // max(char a, char b) int m3 = max(a,c); // error: cannot generate max(int,char) }
Adding the non-template function int max(int,int); to the example above would resolve the third call, by providing a function that can be called for max(a,c) after using the standard conversion of char to int for c.
— end example]
[Example 2: 
Here is an example involving conversions on a function argument involved in template-argument deduction: template<class T> struct B { /* ... */ }; template<class T> struct D : public B<T> { /* ... */ }; template<class T> void f(B<T>&); void g(B<int>& bi, D<int>& di) { f(bi); // f(bi) f(di); // f((B<int>&)di) }
— end example]
[Example 3: 
Here is an example involving conversions on a function argument not involved in template-parameter deduction: template<class T> void f(T*,int); // #1 template<class T> void f(T,char); // #2 void h(int* pi, int i, char c) { f(pi,i); // #1: f<int>(pi,i) f(pi,c); // #2: f<int*>(pi,c) f(i,c); // #2: f<int>(i,c); f(i,i); // #2: f<int>(i,char(i)) }
— end example]
Only the signature of a function template specialization is needed to enter the specialization in a set of candidate functions.
Therefore only the function template declaration is needed to resolve a call for which a template specialization is a candidate.
[Example 4: template<class T> void f(T); // declaration void g() { f("Annemarie"); // calls f<const char*> }
The call to f is well-formed even if the template f is only declared and not defined at the point of the call.
The program will be ill-formed unless a specialization for f<const char*> is explicitly instantiated in some translation unit ([temp.pre]).
— end example]
129)129)
The parameters of function template specializations contain no template parameter types.
The set of conversions allowed on deduced arguments is limited, because the argument deduction process produces function templates with parameters that either match the call arguments exactly or differ only in ways that can be bridged by the allowed limited conversions.
Non-deduced arguments allow the full range of conversions.
Note also that [over.match.best] specifies that a non-template function will be given preference over a template specialization if the two functions are otherwise equally good candidates for an overload match.