When explicitly defaulting a destructor (e.g.: struct s { ~s() = default; };
), it seems that the type can still be used in a constexpr
context. However, when explicitly deleting a destructor (e.g.: struct s { ~s() = delete; };
), Clang no longer thinks the type is viable for a constexpr
context. So, as the title suggests, can a type with an explicitly deleted destructor still be used in a constexpr
context?
struct a { ~a() = default; }; // all ok
struct b { ~b(){} }; // all fail
struct c { ~c() = delete; }; // fails on clang
struct d { constexpr ~d() = default; }; // all ok
struct e { constexpr ~e(){} }; // all ok
struct f { constexpr ~f() = delete; }; // all ok
static_assert(noexcept([]<c>{}));
The error produced by Clang 16.0.0 and Clang trunk:
<source>:9:28: error: non-type template parameter has non-literal type 'c'
static_assert(noexcept([]<c>{}));
^
<source>:3:12: note: 'c' is not literal because its destructor is not constexpr
struct c { ~c() = delete; }; // fails on clang
^
[dcl.fct.def.default]
has a lot aboutconstexpr
but[dcl.fct.def.delete]
doesn't mention it even once.