// RUN: %clang_cc1 -std=c++11 -verify %s
//
// Note: [class.inhctor] was removed by P0136R1. This tests the new behavior
// for the wording that used to be there.
template<int> struct X {};
// Constructor characteristics are:
// - the template parameter list
// - the parameter-type-list
// - absence or presence of explicit
// - absence or presence of constexpr
struct A {
A(X<0>) {} // expected-note 4{{here}}
constexpr A(X<1>) {}
explicit A(X<2>) {} // expected-note 6{{here}}
explicit constexpr A(X<3>) {} // expected-note 4{{here}}
};
A a0 { X<0>{} };
A a0i = { X<0>{} };
constexpr A a0c { X<0>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr A a0ic = { X<0>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
A a1 { X<1>{} };
A a1i = { X<1>{} };
constexpr A a1c { X<1>{} };
constexpr A a1ic = { X<1>{} };
A a2 { X<2>{} };
A a2i = { X<2>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
constexpr A a2c { X<2>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr A a2ic = { X<2>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
A a3 { X<3>{} };
A a3i = { X<3>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
constexpr A a3c { X<3>{} };
constexpr A a3ic = { X<3>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
struct B : A {
using A::A;
};
B b0 { X<0>{} };
B b0i = { X<0>{} };
constexpr B b0c { X<0>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr B b0ic = { X<0>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
B b1 { X<1>{} };
B b1i = { X<1>{} };
constexpr B b1c { X<1>{} };
constexpr B b1ic = { X<1>{} };
B b2 { X<2>{} };
B b2i = { X<2>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
constexpr B b2c { X<2>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr B b2ic = { X<2>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
B b3 { X<3>{} };
B b3i = { X<3>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
constexpr B b3c { X<3>{} };
constexpr B b3ic = { X<3>{} }; // expected-error {{constructor is explicit}}
// 'constexpr' is OK even if the constructor doesn't obey the constraints.
struct NonLiteral { NonLiteral(); };
struct NonConstexpr { NonConstexpr(); constexpr NonConstexpr(int); };
struct Constexpr { constexpr Constexpr(int) {} };
struct BothNonLiteral : NonLiteral, Constexpr { using Constexpr::Constexpr; }; // expected-note {{base class 'NonLiteral' of non-literal type}}
constexpr BothNonLiteral bothNL{42}; // expected-error {{constexpr variable cannot have non-literal type 'const BothNonLiteral'}}
// FIXME: This diagnostic is not very good. We should explain that the problem is that base class NonConstexpr cannot be initialized.
struct BothNonConstexpr
: NonConstexpr,
Constexpr {
using Constexpr::Constexpr; // expected-note {{here}}
};
constexpr BothNonConstexpr bothNC{42}; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{inherited from base class 'Constexpr'}}
struct ConstexprEval {
constexpr ConstexprEval(int a, const char *p) : k(p[a]) {}
char k;
};
struct ConstexprEval2 {
char k2 = 'x';
};
struct ConstexprEval3 : ConstexprEval, ConstexprEval2 {
using ConstexprEval::ConstexprEval;
};
constexpr ConstexprEval3 ce{4, "foobar"};
static_assert(ce.k == 'a', "");
static_assert(ce.k2 == 'x', "");
struct TemplateCtors { // expected-note 2{{candidate constructor (the implicit}}
constexpr TemplateCtors() {} // expected-note {{candidate inherited constructor}}
template<template<int> class T> TemplateCtors(X<0>, T<0>); // expected-note {{here}} expected-note {{candidate inherited constructor}}
template<int N> TemplateCtors(X<1>, X<N>); // expected-note {{here}} expected-note {{candidate inherited constructor}}
template<typename T> TemplateCtors(X<2>, T); // expected-note {{here}} expected-note {{candidate inherited constructor}}
template<typename T = int> TemplateCtors(int, int = 0, int = 0);
};
struct UsingTemplateCtors : TemplateCtors { // expected-note 2{{candidate constructor (the implicit}}
using TemplateCtors::TemplateCtors; // expected-note 6{{inherited here}}
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors(X<0>, X<0>) {} // expected-note {{not viable}}
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors(X<1>, X<1>) {} // expected-note {{not viable}}
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors(X<2>, X<2>) {} // expected-note {{not viable}}
template<int = 0> constexpr UsingTemplateCtors(int) {} // expected-note {{not viable}}
template<typename T = void> constexpr UsingTemplateCtors(int, int) {} // expected-note {{not viable}}
template<typename T, typename U> constexpr UsingTemplateCtors(int, int, int) {} // expected-note {{couldn't infer}}
};
template<int> struct Y {};
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors uct1{ X<0>{}, X<0>{} };
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors uct2{ X<0>{}, Y<0>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors uct3{ X<1>{}, X<0>{} }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors uct4{ X<1>{}, X<1>{} };
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors uct5{ X<2>{}, 0 }; // expected-error {{must be initialized by a constant expression}} expected-note {{non-constexpr}}
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors uct6{ X<2>{}, X<2>{} };
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors utc7{ 0 }; // ok
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors utc8{ 0, 0 }; // ok
// FIXME: The standard says that UsingTemplateCtors' (int, int, int) constructor
// hides the one from TemplateCtors, even though the template parameter lists
// don't match. It's not clear that that's *really* the intent, and it's not
// what other compilers do.
constexpr UsingTemplateCtors utc9{ 0, 0, 0 }; // expected-error {{no matching constructor}}