9

On clang (trunk) I can forward declare an object that will later be defined with constexpr as follows:

// Fwd-declarations
struct S;
extern const S s;

// (... later) definitions
struct S {};
constexpr S s {};

Gcc 4.8 doesn't like this, telling me the forward-declaration and the definition differ in constexpr-ness. Is gcc speaking truth, or is this just a gcc bug?

2 Answers 2

5

I can't find any language in my copy of the C++11 standard that explicitly forbids constexpr-ness from mis-matching between a declaration and a definition, but I do see language explicitly forbidding constexpr from being used with extern (section 7.1.5), and I also see language requiring the initializer for a class-level static constexpr variable to be in the class. Also, since the utility of constexpr is significantly reduced when the definition of the variable or its type is unavailable, I think it's likely the intent is that constexpr variables must be defined (or, for static class members, initialized) when they are declared.

As a work-around, perhaps you could provide an extern alias for the variable. This would allow you to take its address, and that's the only thing I can think of that a forward-declaration would allow. For example:

// .hpp file:
struct C;
extern C const &c;

// .cpp file:
struct C {
    constexpr C() { }
};
constexpr C cc;
C const &c = cc;

Side note: I know that in C++14, they revisited/are revisiting constexpr, so it's possible that it works in Clang because it's implementing some draft spec of C++14.

10
  • C++14 draft implementation must be enabled with -std=c++1y; there's hardly a way to do it by accident.
    – Griwes
    Nov 13, 2013 at 23:54
  • @Griwes I don't use Clang currently (I'd like to, though), so I didn't know that, but it doesn't surprise me. But Clang may have broadened their constexpr support across the board (in a compatible way) while working on C++14. I'm just throwing it out as a possibility. Since I can't find verbiage either way in the standard, it could be that both implementations are valid choices for C++11, or this could be a standard defect. Nov 14, 2013 at 0:01
  • 1
    OK, sounds like a gcc bug. I've filed it here. Nov 14, 2013 at 0:34
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    DyP, just because constexpr must be used on the definition doesn't mean that you can't forward-declare an object, it just means constexpr can't appear in the forward-declaration. I've seen nothing so far that tells me that my original code is invalid. Nov 14, 2013 at 17:00
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    @AdamH.Peterson 3.1/2: "A declaration is a definition unless … it contains the extern specifier (7.1.1) … and neither an initializer nor a function-body…" A constexpr object declaration requires an initializer and extern merely doesn't waive that requirement, but extern constexpr int q = 3; is still valid. Dec 5, 2013 at 1:57
4

The real answer is that gcc is plain wrong, clang is right. The code above should compile, and it will in gcc 4.9. Or so says this bug report.

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