struct A {
int a = 0;
constexpr A() { a = 1; }
};
constexpr bool f() {
constexpr A a;
static_assert(a.a == 1, ""); // L1: OK
return a.a == 1;
}
static_assert(f(), ""); // L2: Error, can not modify A::a in constexpr
- Online Compiler URL: http://goo.gl/jni6Em
- Compiler: clang 3.4 (with -std=c++1y)
- System: Linux 3.2
If I delete L2, this code compiles. If I add L2, the compiler complained "modification of object of const-qualified type 'const int' is not allowed in a constant expression". I am not a language lawyer, so I am not sure whether this is true. However, if it is, why compiler didn't complain anything about L1, since it also called A() as constexpr? Is this a bug of clang? Or did I miss anything?
Reference: http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/constexpr
BTW, if I change "constexpr A a;" to "A a;" (remove constexpr keyword), L1 failed to compile which is expect. However, the compiler didn't complain about L2 anymore.
Online Compiler URL about this: http://goo.gl/AoTzYx