| namespace Eigen { |
| |
| /** \page TopicTemplateKeyword The template and typename keywords in C++ |
| |
| There are two uses for the \c template and \c typename keywords in C++. One of them is fairly well known |
| amongst programmers: to define templates. The other use is more obscure: to specify that an expression refers |
| to a template function or a type. This regularly trips up programmers that use the %Eigen library, often |
| leading to error messages from the compiler that are difficult to understand, such as "expected expression" or |
| "no match for operator<". |
| |
| \eigenAutoToc |
| |
| |
| \section TopicTemplateKeywordToDefineTemplates Using the template and typename keywords to define templates |
| |
| The \c template and \c typename keywords are routinely used to define templates. This is not the topic of this |
| page as we assume that the reader is aware of this (otherwise consult a C++ book). The following example |
| should illustrate this use of the \c template keyword. |
| |
| \code |
| template <typename T> |
| bool isPositive(T x) |
| { |
| return x > 0; |
| } |
| \endcode |
| |
| We could just as well have written <tt>template <class T></tt>; the keywords \c typename and \c class have the |
| same meaning in this context. |
| |
| |
| \section TopicTemplateKeywordExample An example showing the second use of the template keyword |
| |
| Let us illustrate the second use of the \c template keyword with an example. Suppose we want to write a |
| function which copies all entries in the upper triangular part of a matrix into another matrix, while keeping |
| the lower triangular part unchanged. A straightforward implementation would be as follows: |
| |
| <table class="example"> |
| <tr><th>Example:</th><th>Output:</th></tr> |
| <tr><td> |
| \include TemplateKeyword_simple.cpp |
| </td> |
| <td> |
| \verbinclude TemplateKeyword_simple.out |
| </td></tr></table> |
| |
| That works fine, but it is not very flexible. First, it only works with dynamic-size matrices of |
| single-precision floats; the function \c copyUpperTriangularPart() does not accept static-size matrices or |
| matrices with double-precision numbers. Second, if you use an expression such as |
| <tt>mat.topLeftCorner(3,3)</tt> as the parameter \c src, then this is copied into a temporary variable of type |
| MatrixXf; this copy can be avoided. |
| |
| As explained in \ref TopicFunctionTakingEigenTypes, both issues can be resolved by making |
| \c copyUpperTriangularPart() accept any object of type MatrixBase. This leads to the following code: |
| |
| <table class="example"> |
| <tr><th>Example:</th><th>Output:</th></tr> |
| <tr><td> |
| \include TemplateKeyword_flexible.cpp |
| </td> |
| <td> |
| \verbinclude TemplateKeyword_flexible.out |
| </td></tr></table> |
| |
| The one line in the body of the function \c copyUpperTriangularPart() shows the second, more obscure use of |
| the \c template keyword in C++. Even though it may look strange, the \c template keywords are necessary |
| according to the standard. Without it, the compiler may reject the code with an error message like "no match |
| for operator<". |
| |
| |
| \section TopicTemplateKeywordExplanation Explanation |
| |
| The reason that the \c template keyword is necessary in the last example has to do with the rules for how |
| templates are supposed to be compiled in C++. The compiler has to check the code for correct syntax at the |
| point where the template is defined, without knowing the actual value of the template arguments (\c Derived1 |
| and \c Derived2 in the example). That means that the compiler cannot know that <tt>dst.triangularView</tt> is |
| a member template and that the following < symbol is part of the delimiter for the template |
| parameter. Another possibility would be that <tt>dst.triangularView</tt> is a member variable with the < |
| symbol referring to the <tt>operator<()</tt> function. In fact, the compiler should choose the second |
| possibility, according to the standard. If <tt>dst.triangularView</tt> is a member template (as in our case), |
| the programmer should specify this explicitly with the \c template keyword and write <tt>dst.template |
| triangularView</tt>. |
| |
| The precise rules are rather complicated, but ignoring some subtleties we can summarize them as follows: |
| - A <em>dependent name</em> is name that depends (directly or indirectly) on a template parameter. In the |
| example, \c dst is a dependent name because it is of type <tt>MatrixBase<Derived1></tt> which depends |
| on the template parameter \c Derived1. |
| - If the code contains either one of the constructs <tt>xxx.yyy</tt> or <tt>xxx->yyy</tt> and \c xxx is a |
| dependent name and \c yyy refers to a member template, then the \c template keyword must be used before |
| \c yyy, leading to <tt>xxx.template yyy</tt> or <tt>xxx->template yyy</tt>. |
| - If the code contains the construct <tt>xxx::yyy</tt> and \c xxx is a dependent name and \c yyy refers to a |
| member typedef, then the \c typename keyword must be used before the whole construct, leading to |
| <tt>typename xxx::yyy</tt>. |
| |
| As an example where the \c typename keyword is required, consider the following code in \ref TutorialSparse |
| for iterating over the non-zero entries of a sparse matrix type: |
| |
| \code |
| SparseMatrixType mat(rows,cols); |
| for (int k=0; k<mat.outerSize(); ++k) |
| for (SparseMatrixType::InnerIterator it(mat,k); it; ++it) |
| { |
| /* ... */ |
| } |
| \endcode |
| |
| If \c SparseMatrixType depends on a template parameter, then the \c typename keyword is required: |
| |
| \code |
| template <typename T> |
| void iterateOverSparseMatrix(const SparseMatrix<T>& mat; |
| { |
| for (int k=0; k<m1.outerSize(); ++k) |
| for (typename SparseMatrix<T>::InnerIterator it(mat,k); it; ++it) |
| { |
| /* ... */ |
| } |
| } |
| \endcode |
| |
| |
| \section TopicTemplateKeywordResources Resources for further reading |
| |
| For more information and a fuller explanation of this topic, the reader may consult the following sources: |
| - The book "C++ Template Metaprogramming" by David Abrahams and Aleksey Gurtovoy contains a very good |
| explanation in Appendix B ("The typename and template Keywords") which formed the basis for this page. |
| - http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~driscoll/typename.html |
| - http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/templates.html#faq-35.18 |
| - http://www.comeaucomputing.com/techtalk/templates/#templateprefix |
| - http://www.comeaucomputing.com/techtalk/templates/#typename |
| |
| */ |
| } |