Minimized example:
class A { };
class B : public A { };
class C : public A { };
int main() {
B b;
C c;
A& refA = true? b : c;
}
Clang reports:
main.cpp:13:19: error: incompatible operand types ('B' and 'C')
A& refA = true? b : c;
The relevant rule is found in §5.16 [expr.cond]/p3-6 of the standard:
3 Otherwise, if the second and third operand have different types and
either has (possibly cv-qualified) class type, or if both are glvalues
of the same value category and the same type except for
cv-qualification, an attempt is made to convert each of those operands
to the type of the other. The process for determining whether an
operand expression E1 of type T1 can be converted to match an operand
expression E2 of type T2 is defined as follows:
- If E2 is an lvalue: E1 can be converted to match E2 if E1 can be implicitly converted (Clause 4) to the type “lvalue reference to T2”,
subject to the constraint that in the conversion the reference must
bind directly (8.5.3) to an lvalue.
- If E2 is an xvalue: E1 can be converted to match E2 if E1 can be implicitly converted to the type “rvalue reference to T2”, subject to
the constraint that the reference must bind directly.
- If E2 is a prvalue or if neither of the conversions above can be done and at least one of the operands has (possibly cv-qualified)
class type:
- if E1 and E2 have class type, and the underlying class types are the same or one is a base class of the other: E1 can be converted to
match E2 if the class of T2 is the same type as, or a base class of,
the class of T1, and the cv-qualification of T2 is the same
cv-qualification as, or a greater cv-qualification than, the
cv-qualification of T1. If the conversion is applied, E1 is changed to
a prvalue of type T2 by copy-initializing a temporary of type T2 from
E1 and using that temporary as the converted operand.
- Otherwise (i.e., if E1 or E2 has a nonclass type, or if they both have class types but the underlying classes are not either the same or
one a base class of the other): E1 can be converted to match E2 if E1
can be implicitly converted to the type that expression E2 would have
if E2 were converted to a prvalue (or the type it has, if E2 is a
prvalue).
Using this process, it is determined whether the second operand can be
converted to match the third operand, and whether the third operand
can be converted to match the second operand. If both can be
converted, or one can be converted but the conversion is ambiguous,
the program is ill-formed. If neither can be converted, the operands
are left unchanged and further checking is performed as described
below. If exactly one conversion is possible, that conversion is
applied to the chosen operand and the converted operand is used in
place of the original operand for the remainder of this section.
4 If the second and third operands are glvalues of the same value
category and have the same type, the result is of that type and value
category and it is a bit-field if the second or the third operand is a
bit-field, or if both are bit-fields.
5 Otherwise, the result is a prvalue. If the second and third operands
do not have the same type, and either has (possibly cv-qualified)
class type, overload resolution is used to determine the conversions
(if any) to be applied to the operands (13.3.1.2, 13.6). If the
overload resolution fails, the program is ill-formed. Otherwise, the
conversions thus determined are applied, and the converted operands
are used in place of the original operands for the remainder of this
section.
6 Lvalue-to-rvalue (4.1), array-to-pointer (4.2), and
function-to-pointer (4.3) standard conversions are performed on the
second and third operands. After those conversions, one of the
following shall hold:
- The second and third operands have the same type; the result is of that type. If the operands have class type, the result is a prvalue
temporary of the result type, which is copy-initialized from either
the second operand or the third operand depending on the value of the
first operand.
- The second and third operands have arithmetic or enumeration type; the usual arithmetic conversions are performed to bring them to a
common type, and the result is of that type.
- One or both of the second and third operands have pointer type; pointer conversions (4.10) and qualification conversions (4.4) are
performed to bring them to their composite pointer type (Clause 5).
The result is of the composite pointer type.
- One or both of the second and third operands have pointer to member type; pointer to member conversions (4.11) and qualification
conversions (4.4) are performed to bring them to their composite
pointer type (Clause 5). The result is of the composite pointer type.
- Both the second and third operands have type
std::nullptr_t
or one has that type and the other is a null pointer constant. The result is
of type std::nullptr_t
.
The crucial point is that this will always attempt to convert one operand to match the type of the other, rather than convert both to a third type, until you hit paragraph 5, at which point the compiler starts looking for user-defined implicit conversions to pointer or arithmetic types (those are only possible arguments to the built-in candidate functions for operator?:
defined in §13.6), and for your purposes, you really don't want it to get there.
In the minimized example, which correlates directly to your error case (A
= istream
, B
= ifstream
, C
= istringstream
), converting one to the type of the other is not possible, and so the logic goes down to p5, and the compiler looks for user-defined implicit conversions. In the minimized example there's no conversion, overload resolution fails, and the whole thing is ill-formed. In your error case, pre-C++11 (and in libstdc++ post-C++11, apparently) there's an implicit conversion from a stream to void *
, so the compiler does that, giving the whole expression a void *
type, but that obviously can't bind to a reference to std::istream
, so that's the error you see.
In your second case:
ifs.is_open() ? ifs : true ? iss : std::cin;
std::cin
has type std::istream
, and std::istringstream
can be converted to its base class std::istream
, so the inner conditional expression is well-formed and has type std::istream
. Then with the outer conditional expression, again the type of the second operand, std::ifstream
, is convertible to the type of the third operand, std::istream
, so the entire expression is well-formed and has the right type to bind to the reference.