Analysis/explanation:
What you are seeing is shallow instantiation, not full (see below for proof).
ADL is the culprit here.
Hypothesis II I'm suspecting an ADL-related thing here (classes can have static free functions (friends) declared inline. Perhaps the compiler needs to instantiate th...
@Morwenn It's basically how you expect overloaded operators to work, and then your jaw drops that it even works for ordinary functions (followed by, derp, of course: those operators are also functions)
@ThePhD It's basically saying if you have something like f<T>(c);, there has to be an f (that's a function template) that it can find without ADL. Then it may (for example) find and eventually invoke a different function template in the same namespace where c is defined. But, if it doesn't find a function template for fwithout doing the ADL, it stops parsing when it gets to the <, says you have a syntax error, and that's the end of things.
@Borgleader you can use it to evaluate the noexcept state of a function, and also to declare a function noexcept, so in a template you can say "This function doesn't throw exceptions if this other function doesn't." noexcept is generally useful for cimplolers because it's more compile time information for optimization for them, and useful for you because it's easier to be exception safe when you have some functions that won't throw,
so you can make noexcept, strong or weak exception guaramtees in client code, making it easier to reason about, etc.
Interestingly, I seem to recall that implementations are technically non-conforming if they mark library functions noexcept when they aren't specified to be so
@caps wouldn't be valid. You'd want auto bar() noexcept(noexcept(foo())) { foo() }
@Nooble ...at least if that comma is actually a comma operator so they're evaluated from left to right. If it's just a comma between arguments to a function (so it doesn't define sequencing) it's just undefined behavior.
@Morwenn The question is "later than what?" The C++ clearly yields the value of C from before the increment--that much is true. But, it's possible the increment could then take place, and after that, C would be evaluated again to retrieve its value for the left operand of ==, so it now gets the incremented value.
@StackedCrooked The elegance of crawling through the mud, combined with the fantastic utility of stiletto heels, and the blazing speed of...well, okay, I'll stop now.
If I'm using my router, all my queries/communications go through it, so it represents me on the net. However, is the IP from which web servers receive queries the same as that that another user on my LAN will have when communicating to the same web-server?