Looking at libstdc++ source code, I found the following declval implementation:
template<typename _Tp, typename _Up = _Tp&&>
_Up __declval(int); // (1)
template<typename _Tp>
_Tp __declval(long); // (2)
template<typename _Tp>
auto declval() noexcept -> decltype(__declval<_Tp>(0));
This implementation was proposed by Eric Niebler as a compile time optimization: he explains that overload resolution is faster than template instantiation.
However, I can't understand how it works. Specifically:
_Up better than just returning _Tp&& ? How all this prevents template instantiations, as opposed to the most naive implementation:
template<typename T>
T&& declval() noexcept;
The naive implementation is not fully correct. According to the Standard, declval is defined as ([declval]):
template <class T> add_rvalue_reference_t<T> declval() noexcept;
and for add_rvalue_reference<T> the Standard reads ([meta.trans.ref]):
If
Tnames a referenceable type then the member typedeftypenamesT&&; otherwise,typenamesT.
An example of a non-referenceable type is void. The second overload will be used in that case thanks to SFINAE.
As to the first question, I don't see any special reason. _Tp&& should work just fine.
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