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'''Substitution failure is not an error''' ('''SFINAE''') is a principle in [[C++]] where an invalid substitution of [[Template (C++)|template]] parameters is not in itself an error. David Vandevoorde first introduced the acronym SFINAE to describe related programming techniques.<ref>{{cite book | last=Vandevoorde | first=David |author2=Nicolai M. Josuttis | title=C++ Templates: The Complete Guide | publisher=Addison-Wesley Professional | year=2002 | isbn=0-201-73484-2}}</ref>
Specifically, when creating a candidate set for [[overload resolution]], some (or all) candidates of that set may be the result of instantiated templates with (potentially deduced) template arguments substituted for the corresponding template parameters. If an error occurs during the substitution of a set of arguments for any given template, the compiler removes the potential overload from the candidate set instead of stopping with a compilation error, provided that the C++ standard permits discarding
==Example==
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