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Showing content from https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4140/expr.type.conv below:

[expr.type.conv]

5.2.3 Explicit type conversion (functional notation) [expr.type.conv]

A simple-type-specifier ([dcl.type.simple]) or typename-specifier ([temp.res]) followed by a parenthesized expression-list constructs a value of the specified type given the expression list. If the expression list is a single expression, the type conversion expression is equivalent (in definedness, and if defined in meaning) to the corresponding cast expression ([expr.cast]). If the type specified is a class type, the class type shall be complete. If the expression list specifies more than a single value, the type shall be a class with a suitably declared constructor ([dcl.init], [class.ctor]), and the expression T(x1, x2, ...) is equivalent in effect to the declaration T t(x1, x2, ...); for some invented temporary variable t, with the result being the value of t as a prvalue.

The expression T(), where T is a simple-type-specifier or typename-specifier for a non-array complete object type or the (possibly cv-qualified) void type, creates a prvalue of the specified type, whose value is that produced by value-initializing ([dcl.init]) an object of type T; no initialization is done for the void() case. [ Note: if T is a non-class type that is cv-qualified, the cv-qualifiers are discarded when determining the type of the resulting prvalue (Clause [expr]).  — end note ]


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