Why does this code return a warning
warning: ISO C++ forbids converting a string constant to ‘char*’ [-Wwrite-strings]
if
A constexpr specifier used in an object declaration or non-static member function (until C++14) implies const. A constexpr specifier used in a function or static member variable (since C++17) declaration implies inline.
#include <cassert>    
#include <string>    
#include <iostream>    
struct A     
{    
    // warning: ISO C++ forbids converting a string constant to ‘char*’    
    static constexpr char* name_ = "A";                           
    static constexpr char* name() { return name_; };             
};                                             
int main()    
{};    
If I add a const after constexpr, the warning is gone: 
#include <cassert>    
#include <string>    
#include <iostream>   
struct A     
{    
    static constexpr const char* name_ = "A";    
    static constexpr const char* name() { return name_; };    
};                                             
int main()    
{};  
With g++ --version = g++ (GCC) 8.2.1 20181127, 
compilation g++ -O3 -std=c++2a -Wall main.cpp -o main. 
Does the constexpr not imply const on static data members?
 
     
     
    