Should I mark a compiler-generated constructor as constexpr?

前端 未结 1 1562
情书的邮戳
情书的邮戳 2020-12-29 20:12

Is there a difference between doing:

X() = default;

and

constexpr X() = default;

Default-constructing the

相关标签:
1条回答
  • 2020-12-29 20:29

    Since the implicit constructor is actually constexpr in your case…

    [C++11: 12.1/6]: [..] If that user-written default constructor would satisfy the requirements of a constexpr constructor (7.1.5), the implicitly-defined default constructor is constexpr. [..]

    [C++11: 7.1.5/3]: The definition of a constexpr function shall satisfy the following constraints:

    • it shall not be virtual (10.3);
    • its return type shall be a literal type;
    • each of its parameter types shall be a literal type;
    • its function-body shall be = delete, = default, or a compound-statement that contains only
      • null statements,
      • static_assert-declarations
      • typedef declarations and alias-declarations that do not define classes or enumerations,
      • using-declarations,
      • using-directives,
      • and exactly one return statement;
    • every constructor call and implicit conversion used in initializing the return value (6.6.3, 8.5) shall be one of those allowed in a constant expression (5.19).

    … the declarations are actually equivalent:

    [C++11: 8.4.2/2]: An explicitly-defaulted function may be declared constexpr only if it would have been implicitly declared as constexpr, and may have an explicit exception-specification only if it is compatible (15.4) with the exception-specification on the implicit declaration. If a function is explicitly defaulted on its first declaration,

    • it is implicitly considered to be constexpr if the implicit declaration would be,
    • it is implicitly considered to have the same exception-specification as if it had been implicitly declared (15.4), and
    • in the case of a copy constructor, move constructor, copy assignment operator, or move assignment operator, it shall have the same parameter type as if it had been implicitly declared.

    So do either — it doesn't matter.

    In the general case, if you definitely want a constructor to be constexpr, though, it may be wise to leave the keyword in so that you at least get a compiler error if it does not meet the criteria; leaving it out, you may get a non-constexpr constructor without realising it.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题