P1073R3, 2018-11-06

CWG



Richard Smith (richard@metafoo.co.uk)

Andrew Sutton (andrew.n.sutton@gmail.com)

Daveed Vandevoorde (daveed@edg.com)

Immediate functions

Revisions

Revision 0: Original proposal with wording.

Revision 1: Introduce constexpr! token and allow it in lambda expressions.

Revision 2: Replace constexpr! by consteval .

Revision 3: Address CWG review notes.

Introduction and motivation

The constexpr specifier applied to a function or member function indicates that a call to that function might be valid in a context requiring a constant-expression. It does not require that every such call be a constant-expression. Sometimes, however, we want to express that a function should always produce a constant when called (directly or indirectly), and a non-constant result should produce an error. Such a function is called an immediate function. We propose the decl-specifier consteval for that purpose:

consteval int sqr(int n) { return n*n; } constexpr int r = sqr(100); // Okay. int x = 100; int r2 = sqr(x); // Error: Call does not produce a constant.

There is one exception to the rule that a call to a consteval function must be a constant-expression: If the call appears directly in another consteval function, it need not be a constant-expression at that point (since a call to the enclosing function would ultimately have to produce a core constant expression, we do not have to worry about ever having to evaluate that nested call at run time). This permits composition of consteval functions:

consteval int sqrsqr(int n) { return sqr(sqr(n)); // Not a constant-expression at this point, } // but that's okay. constexpr int dblsqr(int n) { return 2*sqr(n); // Error: Enclosing function is not } // consteval.

Finally, as is the case with a bound member function (e.g., " x.f "), a consteval function can only be called; no pointer or reference to it can be formed:

using Int2Int = int(int); Int2Int *pf = sqr; // Error.

One consequence of this specification is that an immediate function never needs to be seen by a back end. That means that immediate functions are an alternative to many function-style macros. It also means that, unlike plain constexpr functions, consteval functions are unlikely to show up in symbolic debuggers. That runs into the broader issue that programmers currently have few tools to debug compile-time evaluation: This proposal does not aim at solving that problem in any way.

Variables

Given that consteval functions are a useful alternative to function-style macros, it is natural to wonder whether we could make consteval variables a useful alternative to non-function-style macros. We'd call such variables — which would never be seen by a back end — immediate variables:

consteval int RN = 42; int LN = 42; int f(int const&); int r1 = f(LN); // Direct reference binding. int r2 = f(RN); // Not a direct binding (temporary created).

Unfortunately, the exact specification of such a facility raises some difficult questions, some of which relate to the topic of enabling class types for nontype template parameters as proposed in P0732R1. This paper therefore does not pursue that extension at this time.

Notes

The desire for functionality like this comes up regularly. Sometimes, the motivation is to eliminate macros, and sometimes it just falls naturally out of the development process (e.g., helper functions meant to create nontype template argument values).

The impetus for the present paper, however, is the work being done by SG7 in the realm of compile-time reflection. There is now general agreement that future language support for reflection should use constexpr functions, but since "reflection functions" typically have to be evaluated at compile time, they will in fact likely be immediate functions.

The general principles of this facility were first discussed in Kona (2017) as part of the discussion of P0595r0. At the time, the following poll was recorded:

Provide a way to write a function that is guaranteed to be produce a constant expression, violations diagnosed at call site? (Direction poll for [immediate functions], ignoring syntax):

SF: 8 | F: 13 | N: 2 | A: 0 | SA: 0

do constexpr

consteval

At the Rapperswil meeting in 2018, essentially this proposal was accepted by EWG except the specifier constexpr! was used instead of consteval . There was some discussion of syntax at the time, but the proposed spelling had reasonably strong support:

Proposal as presented for C++20

SF: 19 | F: 22 | N: 1 | A: 2 | SA: 0



Use "true constexpr" instead of "constexpr!"



constfold

consteval

constfold

Acknowledgments

Wording changes

Add the keyword consteval to Table 5 ("Keywords") in [lex.key].

Add to the grammar of [dcl.spec] paragraph 1:

decl-specifier:

storage-class-specifier

defining-type-specifier

function-specifier

friend

typedef

constexpr

consteval

inline

Update [expr.prim.lambda] paragraph 3 as follows:

In the decl-specifier-seq of the lambda-declarator, each decl-specifier shall either be one of mutable , or constexpr , or consteval . [ Note: The trailing requires-clause is described in Clause 11. — end note ]

Update [expr.prim.lambda.closure] paragraph 4 as follows:

... The function call operator or any given operator template specialization is a constexpr function if either the corresponding lambda-expressionâ€™s parameter-declaration-clause is followed by constexpr or consteval , or it satisfies the requirements for a constexpr function (9.1.5). It is an immediate function (_dcl.constexpr_) if the corresponding lambda-expressionâ€™s parameter-declaration-clause is followed by consteval . ...

Update [expr.prim.lambda.closure] paragraph 7 as follows:

... F is a constexpr function if the function call operator is a constexpr function and is an immediate function if the function call operator is an immediate function .

Update [dcl.constexpr] paragraph 8 as follows:

The constexpr and consteval specifier s have has no effect on the type of a constexpr function or a constexpr constructor.

Add a paragraph after paragraph 2 of [expr.prim.id]:

An id-expression that denotes an immediate function (_dcl.constexpr_) shall appear as a subexpression of an immediate invocation or in an immediate function context (_expr.const_).

Change in [expr.const] paragraph 6:

... ...

if the value is of pointer type, it contains the address of an object with static storage duration, the address past the end of such an object (7.6.6), the address of a non-immediate function, or a null pointer value, and

function, or a null pointer value, and if the value is of pointer-to-member-function type, it does not designate an immediate function, and

... ...

An entity is a permitted result of a constant expression if it is an object with static storage duration that is either not a temporary object or is a temporary object whose value satisfies the above constraints, or it is a non-immediate function. [Example: consteval int f() { return 42; } consteval auto g() { return f; } consteval int h(int (*p)() = g()) { return p(); } constexpr int r = h(); // OK constexpr auto e = g(); // ill-formed: a pointer to an immediate function is // not a permitted result of a constant expression --end example]

In [expr.const] insert a new paragraph immediately preceding paragraph 8 (the paragraph that defines potentially constant evaluated) with the following context:

An expression or conversion is in an immediate function context if it is potentially evaluated and its innermost non-block scope is a function parameter scope of an immediate function. An expression or conversion is an immediate invocation if it is an explicit or implicit invocation of an immediate function and is not in an immediate function context. An immediate invocation shall be a constant expression. [Note: An immediate invocation is evaluated even in an unevaluated operand. --end note]

In [intro.execution] paragraph 5 add a bullet:

A full-expression is ...

a constant-expression (7.7),

(7.7), an immediate invocation (_expr.const_)

...

In [decl.type.simple] paragraph 5 make the following change in the first sentence:

If the operand of a decltype-specifier is a prvalue and is not a (possibly parenthesized) immediate invocation (_expr.const_) , the temporary...

Insert a bullet after the first bullet (8.1) of the definition of potentially constant evaluated in [expr.const] paragraph 8:

An expression or conversion is potentially constant evaluated if it is: ...

an immediate invocation,

... ...

[ Example: struct N { constexpr N() {} N(N const&) = delete; }; template<typename T> constexpr void bad_assert_copyable() { T t; T t2 = t; } using ineffective = decltype(bad_assert_copyable<N>()); // bad_assert_copyable<N> is not needed for constant evaluation // (and thus not instantiated) template<typename T> consteval void assert_copyable() { T t; T t2 = t; } using check = decltype(assert_copyable<N>()); // error: assert_copyable<N> is instantiated (because it is needed for constant // evaluation), but the attempt to copy t is ill-formed — end example ]

Append to [dcl.spec] paragraph 2:

The constexpr and consteval decl-specifiers shall not both appear in a decl-specifier-seq.

Update [dcl.constexpr] paragraph 1 as follows:

The constexpr specifier shall be applied only to the definition of a variable or variable template or the declaration of a function or function template. The consteval specifier shall be applied only to the declaration of a function or function template. A function or static data member declared with the constexpr or consteval specifier is implicitly an inline function or variable (10.1.6). If any declaration of a function or function template has a constexpr or consteval specifier, then all its declarations shall contain the constexpr that same specifier. [ Note: An explicit specialization can differ from the template declaration with respect to the constexpr or consteval specifier. — end note ] [Note: Function parameters cannot be declared constexpr . — end note ]

Update [dcl.constexpr] paragraph 2 as follows:

A constexpr or consteval specifier used in the declaration of a function that is not a constructor declares that function to be a constexpr function. Similarly, a constexpr or consteval specifier used in a constructor declaration declares that constructor to be a constexpr constructor. A function or constructor declared with the consteval specifier is called an immediate function. A destructor, an allocation function, or a deallocation function shall not be declared with the consteval specifier.

Update [dcl.fct.def.default] paragraph 3 as follows:

An explicitly-defaulted function that is not defined as deleted may be declared constexpr or consteval only if it would have been implicitly declared as constexpr . [...]

Add a footnote to [class.virtual] paragraph 1:

... A class that declares or inherits a virtual function is called a polymorphic class. [Footnote: If all virtual functions are immediate functions, the class is still polymorphic even though its internal representation might not otherwise require any additions for that polymorphic behavior.]

Add the following paragraph following [class.virtual] paragraph 17:

A consteval virtual function shall not override a virtual function that is not consteval . A consteval virtual function shall not be overridden by a virtual function that is not consteval .

Update [temp.explicit] paragraph 1 as follows:

[...]An explicit instantiation of a function template, member function of a class template, or variable template shall not use the inline or , constexpr , or consteval specifiers.

Change [diff.cpp17.lex] paragraph 1 as follows: