According to the C++ standard function not returning the value produce an undefined behaviour. It was resonable for C where we don't have constructors but this why this haven't fixed in C++11/14/17?
I think it is natural to default-construct return value if no return statement occur during execution. It will make code cleaner and safer without breaking compatibility with old C++ and C code.
Compare:
optional<int> foo() try {
return some_complex_computation();
} catch (err1& e) {
LOG << e;
return none;
} catch (err2& e) {
LOG << e;
return none;
} catch (err3& e) {
LOG << e;
// oops, undefined behaviour
}
and just
optional<int> foo() try {
return some_complex_computation();
} catch (err1& e) {
LOG << e;
} catch (err2& e) {
LOG << e;
} catch (err3& e) {
LOG << e;
}
return {};
that you need a language feature?