In C++20, the concept of POD is deprecated, supposedly because it is a meaningless composite trait of being trivial and standard-layout.
Incorrect. The term POD is being deprecated because it no longer matters:
The term POD no longer serves a purpose in the standard, it is merely defined, and restrictions apply for when a few other types preserve this vestigial property.
Essentially, a type which is both trivial and standard layout doesn't gain any abilities beyond what being trivial and being standard layout provide on their own. The combination of the two doesn't make the type special, and the two properties don't really have much to do with one another.
Standard layout is about the layout of its non-empty subobjects being well-defined (as well as its empty base class subobjects not disturbing the type's layout). Triviality is about whether the object has some meaning beyond the block of bits that it stores (and whether it is conceptually a valid object if it is initialized with an arbitrary block of bits).
If I'm making a template that takes a type T
, and I want to see if I can memcpy
objects of that type, I don't care about the layout of its members; I want to know if it is TriviallyCopyable. Similarly, the correctness of offsetof
does not care in the slightest if the class has a user-provided copy constructor. All it cares about is if the layout of member subobjects happens in a clear, standard-enforced order.
Basically, people looked around and realized that nothing in C++ is left that specifically needs the intersection of triviality and standard layout. So we don't need to reserve a term for it. Those few places where the standard expressly states that some type will be "POD" can simply be replaced by "trivial and standard layout", as appropriate.
Is this recursive requirement redundant?
Since both of the constituent requirements are individually recursive, the intersection of the two is recursive as well. So there is no explicit need to state that all subobjects are also POD. This was more than likely just a case of a copy-and-paste oddity, where the original definition said something like "all non-static data members must be POD types" and they just kept that statement as is.