Overloaded Templates
You use templates when you need functions that apply the same algorithm to a variety of types, as in Listing 8.11. It might be, however, that not all types would use the same algorithm. To handle this possibility, you can overload template definitions, just as you overload regular function definitions. As with ordinary overloading, overloaded templates need distinct function signatures. For example, Listing 8.12 adds a new swapping template—one for swapping elements of two arrays. The original template has the signature (T &, T &), whereas the new template has the signature (T [], T [], int). Note that the final parameter in this case happens to be a specific type (int) rather than a generic type. Not all template arguments ...
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