Question

Consider:

struct str {};

str operator"" _X(long double d) {
    return str();
}

This compiles fine with g++ 4.7.2 Wall std=c++11

but now if I give a double :

str operator"" _X(double d) {
    return str();
}

I get the following error message: main.cpp|3|error: 'str operator"" _X(double)' has invalid argument list

What is the problem ? Has this something to do with "It is not possible to redefine the meaning of a built-in literal suffix" (Stroustrup FAQ) ? Can you think of a workaround ?

Était-ce utile?

La solution

What is the problem?

The problem is that the Standard forbids it. Per paragraph 13.5.8./3 of the C++11 Standard on user-defined literals:

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

Concerning a workaround, I am not sure it is needed, since the following works fine (a double gets implicitly converted to a long double, so you can pass in literals of type double):

struct str {};

str operator"" _X(long double d) {
    return str();
}

int main()
{
    str s = 4.0_X;
}

Autres conseils

I think it's to prevent ambiguous overloads. What if you were allowed to define the following overload set

str operator"" _X(long double ld);
str operator"" _X(double d);
str operator"" _X(float f);

Can you give examples of user-defined literals in source code that would map to each of the above? No, there's no way to constrain the literal to a particular floating-point datatype.

What could be useful is this set:

str operator"" l_X(long double ld);
str operator""  _X(long double d);
str operator"" f_X(long double f);

Since now you could write

3.0_X  // treated like a double
3.0l_X // treated like a long double
3.0f_X // treated like a float
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