P0292R1 constexpr if has been included, on track for C++17. It seems useful (and can replace use of SFINAE), but a comment regarding static_assert
being ill-formed, no diagnostic required in the false branch scares me:
Disarming static_assert declarations in the non-taken branch of a
constexpr if is not proposed.
void f() {
if constexpr (false)
static_assert(false); // ill-formed
}
template<class T>
void g() {
if constexpr (false)
static_assert(false); // ill-formed; no
// diagnostic required for template definition
}
I take it that it's completely forbidden to use static_assert
inside constexpr if (at least the false / non-taken branch, but that in practice means it's not a safe or useful thing to do).
How does this come about from the standard text? I find no mentioning of static_assert
in the proposal wording, and C++14 constexpr functions do allow static_assert
(details at cppreference: constexpr).
Is it hiding in this new sentence (after 6.4.1) ? :
When a constexpr if statement appears in a templated entity,
during an instantiation of the enclosing template or generic lambda,
a discarded statement is not instantiated.
From there on, I assume that it is also forbidden, no diagnostic required, to call other constexpr (template) functions which somewhere down the call graph may call static_assert
.
Bottom line:
If my understanding is correct, doesn't that put a quite hard limit on the safety and usefulness of constexpr if
as we would have to know (from documentation or code inspection) about any use of static_assert
? Are my worries misplaced?
Update:
This code compiles without warning (clang head 3.9.0) but is to my understanding ill-formed, no diagnostic required. Valid or not?
template< typename T>
constexpr void other_library_foo(){
static_assert(std::is_same<T,int>::value);
}
template<class T>
void g() {
if constexpr (false)
other_library_foo<T>();
}
int main(){
g<float>();
g<int>();
}
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