In the C++14 Standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2014) the word "non-mutable" was added in Section 5.19, Paragraph 2 (emphasis mine):
A conditional-expression e is a core constant expression unless the evaluation of e, following the rules of the abstract machine (1.9), would evaluate one of the following expressions:
- [...]
- an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion (4.1) unless it is applied to
- [...]
- a non-volatile glvalue that refers to a non-volatile object defined with constexpr, or that refers to a non-mutable sub-object of such an object, or
Therefore, this code is not correct in C++14:
class A {
public:
mutable int x;
};
int main(){
constexpr A a = {1};
constexpr int y = a.x;
return 0;
}
However, is it correct in C++11?
This is the Defect Report (CD3) 1405 where they proposed to add non-mutable:
Currently, literal class types can have mutable members. It is not clear whether that poses any particular problems with constexpr objects and constant expressions, and if so, what should be done about it.
So I would say it is correct C++11 code. Nevertheless, I tried Clang and GCC with -std=c++11 and both output an error saying mutable variables are not allowed in a constant expression. But that constraint is something added in C++14, it was not in C++11.
Does anyone know if that code is correct in C++11?
See also Defect Report (CD3) 1428.