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c++ - Why does outputting a class with a conversion operator not work for std::string?

This works, printing 1:

#include <iostream>

struct Int {
    int i;
    operator int() const noexcept {return i;}
};

int main() {
    Int i;
    i.i = 1;
    std::cout << i;
}

However, this fails to compile on GCC 4.8.1:

#include <iostream>
#include <string>

struct String {
    std::string s;
    operator std::string() const {return s;}
};

int main() {
    String s;
    s.s = "hi";
    std::cout << s;
}

Here are the relevant parts of the error:

error: no match for ‘operator<<’ (operand types are ‘std::ostream {aka std::basic_ostream}’ and ‘String’)
std::cout << s;

snip

template std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>& std::operator<<(std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>&, const std::basic_string<_CharT, _Traits, _Alloc>&)
operator<<(basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>& __os,

/usr/include/c++/4.8/bits/basic_string.h:2753:5: note: template argument deduction/substitution failed:
main.cpp:25:18: note: ‘String’ is not derived from ‘const std::basic_string<_CharT, _Traits, _Alloc>’
std::cout << s;

I only use std::cout and std::string, which have the same template arguments. I'm really not sure why this wouldn't be able to pick up the implicit conversion like it did for Int. Why does it work with int, but not std::string?

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by (71.8m points)

That operator is a free template function. User defined conversions do not get checked when matching against a template function arguments, it instead uses type pattern matching (substitution).

In theory a SFINAE overload using std::is_convertable<> would be able to do what you want, but that technique was not used when operator<< that outputs a std::string to a basic_ostream<char> was defined.

A manual overload to output your class to basic_ostream<...> will fix your problem.

I would do this:

struct String {
  std::string s;
  operator std::string() const {return s;}
  friend std::ostream& operator<<( std::ostream& os, String const& self) {
    return os<<self.s;
  }
};

which has the added benefit of not creating a wasted copy.


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