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Default Arguments for Class Templates

Class templates can have default arguments for type or value parameters. Specify default arguments with the equal (=) sign followed by the type name or value. For multiple template arguments, all arguments after the first default argument must have default arguments. When declaring a template class object with default arguments, omit the arguments to accept the default argument. If there are no nondefault arguments, do not omit the empty angle brackets.

A template that is multiply declared cannot specify a default argument more than once. The following code demonstrates an error:

template <class T = long> class A;
template <class T = long> class A { /* . . . */ }; // Generates C4348.

Example

In the following example, an array class template is defined with a default type int for the array element and a default value for the template parameter specifying the size.

// template_default_arg.cpp
// compile with: /EHsc
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

template <class T = int, int size = 10> class Array
{
   T* array;
public:
   Array()
   {
      array = new T[size];
      memset(array, 0, size * sizeof(T));
   }
   T& operator[](int i)
   {
      return *(array + i);
   }
   const int Length() { return size; }
   void print()
   {
      for (int i = 0; i < size; i+)
      {
         cout << (*this)[i] << " ";
      }
      cout << endl;
   }
};

int main()
{
   // Explicitly specify the template arguments:
   Array<char, 26> ac;
   for (int i = 0; i < ac.Length(); i+)
   {
      ac[i] = 'A' + i;
   }
   ac.print();
   
   // Accept the default template arguments:
   Array<> a; // You must include the angle brackets.
   for (int i = 0; i < a.Length(); i+)
   {
      a[i] = i*10;
   }
   a.print();
}

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See Also

Reference

Default Arguments