This is committed code to a library that's under active development and has stable versions. VC++ chooses the operator Type&
overload, making it so that in some instances the return value is deduced as a reference, triggering the infamous "returning address of temporary" error in VC++.
I don't know if g++ warns about that kind of stuff, but I'm pretty sure it should... so unless g++ is picking the const &&
overload in my cases, this code should be broken even in the Continous INtegration tests that get run.
This is bothering me. Is g++ selecting const &&
for a temporary? I'm gonna coliru check...
Okay, so g++ here chooses const &&
Now I have to read the standard to find out whose right, and submit a bug report. =/
I hate VC++'s online compiler.
It's literally the worst.
Whose the other provider that has a VC++ compiler for free?
Okay, so VC++ in the testcase I made chooses const &&
too.
What's going on with this library, then?
> const internal::TableAccessorPath<const Reference&, Key>
tfw people have const return values that are not references
Oh, okay. So it's definitely not VC++'s or g++'s fault. There were more mechanics at play than I had originally thought.
So the const &
overload is for converting to Type&
, not just Type
, so in the end that is what triggers the overload.
... But why did the author do that?