which parts of the Standard Library will now be marked constexpr?
From the draft that I've looked at for C++14, N3690, the following will be changed to constexpr thus far (In comparison with the C++11 standard)†:
std::error_category's default constructor
std::forward
std::move
std::move_if_noexcept
- All of
std::pair's operator comparisons
std::get for std::pair and std::tuple.
std::make_tuple
- All of
std::tuple's operator comparisons
- All of
std::optional's operator comparisons
- All of
std::optional's constructors (save for move)
operator[] and size for std::bitset and other containers.
- All of
std::complex's operator comparisons
† Since I did this manually, you can expect some errors :(
For another possibly more correct list of constexpr additions you can check: N3469, N3470, and N3471
which other parts could be marked constexpr?
Most of the stuff that could be constexpr (std::numeric_limits evaluation, std::tuple and std::pair constructors, etc) were already marked as constexpr in the C++11 standard. There was a bug in which std::ratio's time points and other components weren't marked as constexpr but it was fixed in N3469.
Something that would benefit from constexpr additions would be std::initializer_list, which didn't get any this time around (and I'm unsure if there have been any proposals to allow it).
are there backwards compatibility reasons not to do so?
Since this is an extension, most stuff won't be broken since older code will still compile as-is and nothing is now ill-formed. However adding constexpr to older things that didn't have it could lead to some surprising results if you didn't expect it, such as the example provided here (Thanks TemplateRex)