I have been wondering if there is any difference between what is being pointed by ptrToArray
and ptrToLiteral
in the following example:
constexpr char constExprArray[] = "hello";
const char* ptrToArray = constExprArray;
const char* ptrToLiteral = "hello";
- Is my understanding that
constExprArray
and the two "hello"
literals are all compile time constant lvalues correct?
- If so, is there any difference in how they are stored in the executable file, or is it purely compiler implementation or platform specific?
- Are they treated differently at runtime behind the scenes?
- Anything else to know about?
A string literal and a constexpr array of char are almost identical. A pointer to either is an address constant expression. An lvalue-to-rvalue conversion is permitted on their elements in a constant expression. They both have static storage duration. The only difference that I know of is that a string literal can initialize an array whereas a constexpr array cannot:
constexpr char a[] = "hello";
constexpr char b[] = a; // ill-formed
constexpr char b[] = "hello"; // ok
To get around this you can wrap the array in a class of literal type. We are currently looking at standardizing such a wrapper that will be called std::string_literal
or similar, but for now you will have to do this by hand.