I encountered a problem when using constexpr functions together with lambdas. The following code is a minimal version which reproduces the error:
#include <iostream>
constexpr unsigned bar(unsigned q) {
return q;
}
template<unsigned N>
unsigned foo() {
return N;
}
template<typename F>
void print(F f) {
std::cout << f() << std::endl;
}
template<unsigned Q>
int stuff() {
constexpr unsigned n = bar(Q);
print([]() { return foo<n>(); });
}
int main() {
stuff<13>();
}
When compiling with gcc version 4.6.3 (Ubuntu/Linaro 4.6.3-1ubuntu5)
there are the following compiler errors:
constexpr_template.cpp: In lambda function:
constexpr_template.cpp:24:9: instantiated from ‘stuff() [with unsigned int Q = 13u]::<lambda()>’
constexpr_template.cpp:24:2: instantiated from ‘int stuff() [with unsigned int Q = 13u]’
constexpr_template.cpp:29:12: instantiated from here
constexpr_template.cpp:24:32: error: no matching function for call to ‘foo()’
constexpr_template.cpp:24:32: note: candidate is:
constexpr_template.cpp:9:10: note: template<unsigned int N> unsigned int foo()
Now the strange part is, if constexpr unsigned n = bar(Q);
is changed into constexpr unsigned n = Q;
it works.
What is also working is print([]() { return foo<bar(Q)>(); });
...
Is this a bug in GCC or what am I doing wrong?