Why must I use address-of operator to get a pointer to a member function?

落爺英雄遲暮 提交于 2019-11-29 14:06:41
auto p1 = &f;     // ok
auto p2 = f;      // ok

The first is more or less the right thing. But because non-member functions have implicit conversions to pointers, the & isn't necessary. C++ makes that conversion, same applies to static member functions.

To quote from cppreference:

An lvalue of function type T can be implicitly converted to a prvalue pointer to that function. This does not apply to non-static member functions because lvalues that refer to non-static member functions do not exist.

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