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I am trying to understand how lvalues bind to rvalue references. Consider this code:

#include <iostream>

template<typename T>
void f(T&& x) {
    std::cout << x;
}

void g(int&& x) {
    std::cout << x;
}

int main() {
    int x = 4;

    f(x);
    g(x);
    return 0;
}

While the call to f() is fine, the call to g() gives a compile-time error. Does this kind of binding work only for templates? Why? Can we somehow do it without templates?

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Since T is a template argument, T&& becomes a forwarding-reference. Due to reference collapsing rules, f(T& &&) becomes f(T&) for lvalues and f(T &&) becomes f(T&&) for rvalues.


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