Hi all - I'm attempting to use gsl (gnu scientific library) from my C++ program. gsl is a C program, and I need to pass function pointers to gsl to make it do it's magic on my data. The problem I'm having stems from the fact that I need my functions to be template functions. I can get everything to compile, but I can't get it to link. The gist is like this: template<class Stencil> int ll_uv_f(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_vector *f){ LL_uv_data<Stencil> *lld = static_cast< LL_uv_data<Stencil>* >(params); const real a = gsl_vector_get(x,0); const real b = gsl_vector_get(x,1); Vec v = lld->ll->eval(a, b) - lld->pt; for(int i = 0; i < 2; ++i){ gsl_vector_set(f, i, v[i]); } return GSL_SUCCESS; } template<class Stencil> int ll_uv_df(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_matrix *J){...} template<class Stencil> int ll_uv_fdf(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_vector *f, gsl_matrix *J){...} The calling function then contains the code: LL_uv_data<BaseStencil> dat(Vec(u,v), this); gsl_multiroot_function_fdf f = {ll_uv_f<BaseStencil>, ll_uv_df<BaseStencil>, ll_uv_fdf<BaseStencil>, 2, &dat}; I also explicitly instantiate the template functions for several instances in a .cc file: //explicit instantiation of template functions template int ll_uv_fdf<CCStencil>(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_vector *f, gsl_matrix *J); template int ll_uv_fdf<BSStencil>(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_vector *f, gsl_matrix *J); . . . template int ll_uv_df<CCStencil>(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_matrix *J); template int ll_uv_df<BSStencil>(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_matrix *J); . . . template int ll_uv_f<CCStencil>(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_vector *f); template int ll_uv_f<BSStencil>(const gsl_vector *x, void *params, gsl_vector *f); . . . The program compiles fine, and the functions int ll_uv_*() are found by the nm utility to be in a .o file. The program still won't link. Anyone have any ideas? Is this something I'm doing wrong? The gcc version is 3.4.5-r1, and this is on a xeon box running linux. Thanks, Brian