I'm not sure I fully understand that quote: double can be converted to float (even if float has a lower rank) because they are both "standard", whereas the same doesn't apply to std::float16_t? On Fri, Mar 24, 2023, 21:22 Jonathan Wakely wrote: > > > On Fri, 24 Mar 2023, 17:05 Filippo Bistaffa via Gcc-help, < > gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org> wrote: > >> I was playing around with gcc-trunk's support for C++23's std::float13_t >> and I found out that, while float is constructible from double, as far as >> I >> can tell std::float13_t is not. >> In other words, the following code compiles OK: >> >> #include >> #include >> int main() { >> std::vector x(5); >> std::vector y(std::begin(x), std::end(x)); >> } >> >> whereas the following does not: >> >> #include >> #include >> int main() { >> std::vector x(5); >> std::vector y(std::begin(x), std::end(x)); >> } >> >> See this snippet . >> Am I missing something or is it supposed to be like that? >> > > Yes, this is the correct behaviour. The C++23 standard says: > > "A prvalue of floating-point type can be converted to a prvalue of another > floating-point type with a greater or equal conversion rank ([conv.rank] > ). > A prvalue of standard floating-point type can be converted to a prvalue of > another standard floating-point type." > > > >