// RUN: %clang_cc1 -std=c++2a -verify %s // When forming and checking satisfaction of atomic constraints, we will // substitute still-dependent template arguments into an expression, and later // substitute into the result. This creates some unique situations; check that // they work. namespace SubstIntoResolvedTypeTemplateArg { template struct X {}; template concept A = true; template concept B = sizeof(T) != 0; template concept C = B>; int f(A auto); // expected-note {{candidate}} int f(C auto); // expected-note {{candidate}} int k1 = f(0); // expected-error {{ambiguous}} template concept D = A && B>; int f(D auto); int k2 = f(0); // ok // The atomic constraint formed from B> is identical to the // one formed from C, even though the template arguments are written as // different expressions; the "equivalent" rules are used rather than the // "identical" rules when matching template arguments in concept-ids. template concept E = A && B>; int g(C auto); int g(E auto); // expected-note {{candidate}} int k3 = g(0); int g(D auto); // expected-note {{candidate}} int k4 = g(0); // expected-error {{ambiguous}} }