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      1 namespace Eigen {
      2 
      3 /** \page TopicTemplateKeyword The template and typename keywords in C++
      4 
      5 There are two uses for the \c template and \c typename keywords in C++. One of them is fairly well known
      6 amongst programmers: to define templates. The other use is more obscure: to specify that an expression refers
      7 to a template function or a type. This regularly trips up programmers that use the %Eigen library, often
      8 leading to error messages from the compiler that are difficult to understand, such as "expected expression" or
      9 "no match for operator<".
     10 
     11 \eigenAutoToc
     12 
     13 
     14 \section TopicTemplateKeywordToDefineTemplates Using the template and typename keywords to define templates
     15 
     16 The \c template and \c typename keywords are routinely used to define templates. This is not the topic of this
     17 page as we assume that the reader is aware of this (otherwise consult a C++ book). The following example
     18 should illustrate this use of the \c template keyword.
     19 
     20 \code
     21 template <typename T>
     22 bool isPositive(T x)
     23 {
     24     return x > 0;
     25 }
     26 \endcode
     27 
     28 We could just as well have written <tt>template &lt;class T&gt;</tt>; the keywords \c typename and \c class have the
     29 same meaning in this context.
     30 
     31 
     32 \section TopicTemplateKeywordExample An example showing the second use of the template keyword
     33 
     34 Let us illustrate the second use of the \c template keyword with an example. Suppose we want to write a
     35 function which copies all entries in the upper triangular part of a matrix into another matrix, while keeping
     36 the lower triangular part unchanged. A straightforward implementation would be as follows:
     37 
     38 <table class="example">
     39 <tr><th>Example:</th><th>Output:</th></tr>
     40 <tr><td>
     41 \include TemplateKeyword_simple.cpp
     42 </td>
     43 <td>
     44 \verbinclude TemplateKeyword_simple.out
     45 </td></tr></table>
     46 
     47 That works fine, but it is not very flexible. First, it only works with dynamic-size matrices of
     48 single-precision floats; the function \c copyUpperTriangularPart() does not accept static-size matrices or
     49 matrices with double-precision numbers. Second, if you use an expression such as
     50 <tt>mat.topLeftCorner(3,3)</tt> as the parameter \c src, then this is copied into a temporary variable of type
     51 MatrixXf; this copy can be avoided.
     52 
     53 As explained in \ref TopicFunctionTakingEigenTypes, both issues can be resolved by making 
     54 \c copyUpperTriangularPart() accept any object of type MatrixBase. This leads to the following code:
     55 
     56 <table class="example">
     57 <tr><th>Example:</th><th>Output:</th></tr>
     58 <tr><td>
     59 \include TemplateKeyword_flexible.cpp
     60 </td>
     61 <td>
     62 \verbinclude TemplateKeyword_flexible.out
     63 </td></tr></table>
     64 
     65 The one line in the body of the function \c copyUpperTriangularPart() shows the second, more obscure use of
     66 the \c template keyword in C++.  Even though it may look strange, the \c template keywords are necessary
     67 according to the standard. Without it, the compiler may reject the code with an error message like "no match
     68 for operator<".
     69 
     70 
     71 \section TopicTemplateKeywordExplanation Explanation
     72 
     73 The reason that the \c template keyword is necessary in the last example has to do with the rules for how
     74 templates are supposed to be compiled in C++. The compiler has to check the code for correct syntax at the
     75 point where the template is defined, without knowing the actual value of the template arguments (\c Derived1
     76 and \c Derived2 in the example). That means that the compiler cannot know that <tt>dst.triangularView</tt> is
     77 a member template and that the following &lt; symbol is part of the delimiter for the template
     78 parameter. Another possibility would be that <tt>dst.triangularView</tt> is a member variable with the &lt;
     79 symbol refering to the <tt>operator&lt;()</tt> function. In fact, the compiler should choose the second
     80 possibility, according to the standard. If <tt>dst.triangularView</tt> is a member template (as in our case),
     81 the programmer should specify this explicitly with the \c template keyword and write <tt>dst.template
     82 triangularView</tt>.
     83 
     84 The precise rules are rather complicated, but ignoring some subtleties we can summarize them as follows:
     85 - A <em>dependent name</em> is name that depends (directly or indirectly) on a template parameter. In the
     86   example, \c dst is a dependent name because it is of type <tt>MatrixBase&lt;Derived1&gt;</tt> which depends
     87   on the template parameter \c Derived1.
     88 - If the code contains either one of the constructs <tt>xxx.yyy</tt> or <tt>xxx-&gt;yyy</tt> and \c xxx is a
     89   dependent name and \c yyy refers to a member template, then the \c template keyword must be used before 
     90   \c yyy, leading to <tt>xxx.template yyy</tt> or <tt>xxx-&gt;template yyy</tt>.
     91 - If the code contains the construct <tt>xxx::yyy</tt> and \c xxx is a dependent name and \c yyy refers to a
     92   member typedef, then the \c typename keyword must be used before the whole construct, leading to
     93   <tt>typename xxx::yyy</tt>.
     94 
     95 As an example where the \c typename keyword is required, consider the following code in \ref TutorialSparse
     96 for iterating over the non-zero entries of a sparse matrix type:
     97 
     98 \code
     99 SparseMatrixType mat(rows,cols);
    100 for (int k=0; k<mat.outerSize(); ++k)
    101   for (SparseMatrixType::InnerIterator it(mat,k); it; ++it)
    102   {
    103     /* ... */
    104   }
    105 \endcode
    106 
    107 If \c SparseMatrixType depends on a template parameter, then the \c typename keyword is required:
    108 
    109 \code
    110 template <typename T>
    111 void iterateOverSparseMatrix(const SparseMatrix<T>& mat;
    112 {
    113   for (int k=0; k<m1.outerSize(); ++k)
    114     for (typename SparseMatrix<T>::InnerIterator it(mat,k); it; ++it)
    115     {
    116       /* ... */
    117     }
    118 }
    119 \endcode
    120 
    121 
    122 \section TopicTemplateKeywordResources Resources for further reading
    123 
    124 For more information and a fuller explanation of this topic, the reader may consult the following sources:
    125 - The book "C++ Template Metaprogramming" by David Abrahams and Aleksey Gurtovoy contains a very good
    126   explanation in Appendix B ("The typename and template Keywords") which formed the basis for this page.
    127 - http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~driscoll/typename.html
    128 - http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/templates.html#faq-35.18
    129 - http://www.comeaucomputing.com/techtalk/templates/#templateprefix
    130 - http://www.comeaucomputing.com/techtalk/templates/#typename
    131 
    132 */
    133 }
    134