A static constexpr
will implicitly also be inline
, otherwise you will need to mark it as inline
template<typename T>
struct SomeClass {
inline static T test; // Now inline
};
struct SomeClass2 {
static constexpr int test = 9; // inline
};
Cfr. from n4606 [depr.static_constexpr]
For compatibility with prior C++ International Standards, a constexpr static data member may be redundantly redeclared outside the class with no initializer. This usage is deprecated.
Example:
struct A {
static constexpr int n = 5; // definition (declaration in C++ 2014)
};
const int A::n; // redundant declaration (definition in C++ 2014)
and [dcl.constexpr]
(Barry beat me to it)
A function or static data member declared with the constexpr specifier is implicitly an inline function or variable (7.1.6).