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1 // RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify %s
2 // RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -std=c++98 %s
3 // RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -std=c++11 %s
4 
5 // A type-parameter defines its identifier to be a type-name (if
6 // declared with class or typename) or template-name (if declared with
7 // template) in the scope of the template declaration.
8 template<typename T> struct X0 {
9   T* value;
10 };
11 
12 template<template<class T> class Y> struct X1 {
13   Y<int> value;
14 };
15 
16 // [Note: because of the name lookup rules, a template-parameter that
17 // could be interpreted as either a non-type template-parameter or a
18 // type-parameter (because its identifier is the name of an already
19 // existing class) is taken as a type-parameter. For example,
20 class T { /* ... */ };  // expected-note{{candidate constructor (the implicit copy constructor) not viable}}
21 #if __cplusplus >= 201103L // C++11 or later
22 // expected-note@-2 {{candidate constructor (the implicit move constructor) not viable}}
23 #endif
24 
25 int i;
26 
27 template<class T, T i> struct X2 {
fX228   void f(T t)
29   {
30     T t1 = i; //template-parameters T and i
31     ::T t2 = ::i; // global namespace members T and i  \
32     // expected-error{{no viable conversion}}
33   }
34 };
35 
36 namespace PR6831 {
37   namespace NA { struct S; }
38   namespace NB { struct S; }
39 
40   using namespace NA;
41   using namespace NB;
42 
43   template <typename S> void foo();
44   template <int S> void bar();
45   template <template<typename> class S> void baz();
46 }
47