#include <algorithm>
struct S
{
static constexpr int X = 10;
};
int main()
{
return std::min(S::X, 0);
};
If std::min expects a const int&, the compiler very likely would like to have the S::X also defined somewhere, i.e. the storage of S::X must exists.
Is there a way to force the compiler to evaluate my constexpr at compile time?
The reason is:
Initially, we had a problem in early initialization of static variables in the init priority. There was some struct Type<int> { static int max; };, and some global static int x = Type<int>::max;, and some other early code other_init used that x. When we updated GCC, suddenly we had x == 0 in other_init.
We thought that we could avoid the problem by using constexpr, so that it would always evaluate it at compile time.
The only other way would be to use struct Type<int> { static constexpr int max(); }; instead, i.e. letting it be a function.