The factorial can be printed in compiler-generated message as:
template<int x> struct _;
int main() {
_<Factorial<10>::value> __;
return 0;
}
Error message:
prog.cpp:14:32: error: aggregate ‘_<3628800> __’ has incomplete type and cannot be defined
_::value> __;
^
Here 3628800
is factorial of 10
.
See it at ideone : http://ideone.com/094SJz
So are you looking for this?
EDIT:
Matthieu asked for a clever trick to both print the factorial AND let the compilation continue. Here is one attempt. It doesn't give any error, hence the compilation succeeds with one warning.
template<int factorial>
struct _{ operator char() { return factorial + 256; } }; //always overflow
int main() {
char(_<Factorial<5>::value>());
return 0;
}
It gets compiled with this warning:
main.cpp: In instantiation of '_::operator char() [with int
factorial = 120]': main.cpp:16:39: required from here
main.cpp:13:48: warning: overflow in implicit constant conversion
[-Woverflow] struct _{ operator char() { return factorial + 256; } };
//always overflow
Here 120
is factorial of 5
.
Demo at ideone : http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/c4d703a670060545
You could just write a nice macro, and use it instead as:
#define PRINT_AS_WARNING(constant) char(_<constant>())
int main()
{
PRINT_AS_WARNING(Factorial<5>::value);
return 0;
}
That looks great.
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