I just read the wiki article about CRTP, and I\'m a little confused about template instantiation.
According to the wiki,
member function bodi
You seem to be confusing one thing:
Instantiation happens during compilation, not during runtime. Hence you can't say "on which line" a class template or a function template was instantiated.
That said, you're right about the fact that member function templates aren't instantiated together with class templates.
You could observe it in such a case: You have the following files
Then during compilation of a.cpp, only A would be instantiated. However, during compilation of b.cpp, both would be instantiated.
Because of this, in case A::foo contained some semantically invalid code for a given set of template parameters, you would get compile errors in b.cpp, but not a.cpp.
I hope that clears things up!
With class templates, the rule of thumb is that only those members are instantiated which are actually used.
If you want complete instantiation, C++ offers explicit instantiation (however, usually you don't; the fact that not every bit is fully instantiated means that your template class is even more generic as it lowers the requirements on T
, note that syntax checking and lookup of non-dependent types (stuff that is not dependent on T
) still happens).
You will find a more complete answer here: Template instantiation details of GCC and MS compilers