Consider the code
#include <iostream>
class Foo
{
    int val_;
public:
    Foo(std::initializer_list<Foo> il)
    {
        std::cout << "initializer_list ctor" << std::endl;
    }
    /* explicit */ Foo(int val): val_(val)
    {
        std::cout << "ctor" << std::endl;
    };
};
int main(int argc, char const *argv[])
{
    // why is the initializer_list ctor invoked?
    Foo foo {10}; 
}
The output is
ctor
initializer_list ctor
As far as I understand, the value 10 is implicitly converted to a Foo (first ctor output), then the initializer constructor kicks in (second initializer_list ctor output). My question is why is this happening? Isn't the standard constructor Foo(int) a better match? I.e., I would have expected the output of this snippet to be just ctor.
PS: If I mark the constructor Foo(int) as explicit, then Foo(int) is the only constructor invoked, as the integer 10 cannot now be implicitly converted to a Foo.