I was reading litb's question about SFINAE here and I was wondering exactly what his code is declaring. A simpler (without the templates) example is below:
int (&a())[2];
What exactly is that declaring? What is the role of the &? To add to my confusion, if I declare the following instead
int b()[2];
I get an error about declaring a function that returns an array, while the first line has no such error (therefore, one would think the first declaration is not a function). However, if I try to assign a
a = a;
I get an error saying I'm attempting to assign the function a... so now it is a function. What exactly is this thing?
There's these awesome programs called cdecl and c++decl. They're very helpful for figuring out complicated declarations, especially for the byzantine forms that C and C++ use for function pointers.
tyler@kusari ~ $ c++decl
Type `help' or `?' for help
c++decl> explain int (&a())[2]
declare a as function returning reference to array 2 of int
c++decl> explain int b()[2]
declare b as function returning array 2 of int
a returns a reference, b does not.
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