When we have a non-dependent expression such as

A::f

that occurs within a non-static member function with a type-dependent
"this", don't consider this to be a case for introduction of an
implicit "(*this)." to refer to a specific member function unless we
know (at template definition time) that A is a base class of *this.

There is some disagreement here between GCC, EDG, and Clang about the
handling of this case. I believe that Clang now has the correct,
literal interpretation of the standard, but have asked for
clarification (c++std-core-15483).



git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@89425 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This commit is contained in:
Douglas Gregor 2009-11-20 00:59:20 +00:00
Родитель b4eea69186
Коммит f3c1f0e136
2 изменённых файлов: 20 добавлений и 6 удалений

Просмотреть файл

@ -2335,11 +2335,6 @@ bool Sema::isImplicitMemberReference(const CXXScopeSpec *SS, NamedDecl *D,
// class. If not, this isn't an implicit member reference.
ThisType = MD->getThisType(Context);
// If the type of "this" is dependent, we can't tell if the member is in a
// base class or not, so treat this as a dependent implicit member reference.
if (ThisType->isDependentType())
return true;
QualType CtxType = Context.getTypeDeclType(cast<CXXRecordDecl>(Ctx));
QualType ClassType
= Context.getTypeDeclType(cast<CXXRecordDecl>(MD->getParent()));

Просмотреть файл

@ -84,6 +84,8 @@ int *a(A0<int> &x0, A1<int> &x1) {
struct X0Base {
int &f();
int& g(int);
static double &g(double);
};
template<typename T>
@ -92,9 +94,26 @@ struct X0 : X0Base {
template<typename U>
struct X1 : X0<U> {
int &f2() { return X0Base::f(); }
int &f2() {
return X0Base::f(); // expected-error{{call to non-static member function without an object argument}}
}
};
void test_X1(X1<int> x1i) {
int &ir = x1i.f2();
}
template<typename U>
struct X2 : X0Base, U {
int &f2() { return X0Base::f(); }
};
template<typename T>
struct X3 {
void test(T x) {
double& d1 = X0Base::g(x);
}
};
template struct X3<double>;