2:24 AM
when the compiler sees something like std::vector<T>::value_type
(where T
is a type parameter), it doesn't know whether value_type
is a type or a value; it can't look into the definition of std::vector<T>
because some std::vector<whatever_t>
could redefine value_type
to be the other thing
the compiler has to assume that it must be a value (per the standard), and you add typename
to change that decision
when the compiler sees something like std::vector<int>::value_type
(where int
is a concrete type), it can look at the definition of std::vector<int>
because at that point, the compiler knows precisely which definition to use (be it a specialized one or not)