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For nested templates, when did `>>` become standard C++ (instead of `> >`)?

I seem to recall, in times of yore, being warned against putting two > characters right next to each other (without a space) when dealing with nested template parameters. I even vaguely remember declaring vectors of vectors of whatever and encountering this compilation error.

But now I find that there is absolutely nothing wrong with compiling the dreaded >>...

My question(s) are thus:

At what point did this convention become an acceptable practice?

Is it part of standard C++?

Was it always part of the standard and the compilers I used (and the professors I had) in college just didn't support it yet?

Maybe these questions are a tad bit historical, but for me it seems that proper historical context makes actual remembering trivial.

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Templates closed with nested >> are officially supported by the upcoming standard C++0x (now C++11). Previously you would need the space, or a compiler that went the extra mile for you (and did things not indicated by the standard).

The issue stems from the fact that >> in C is the right-shift operator, which is a single lexical token, which conflicts with the two separate > tokens that would be needed during the parsing stage in a classically-constructed C++ compiler (and only in the case of templates, not when it actually is a right-shift). In other words, the >>, if allowed to close nested templates, is lexically ambiguous, but this can be (and is being) addressed by extra sophistication during parsing (which in modern C++ is really nothing new).


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