no you can't do it, here's what the standard says (section 7.1.5):
1 The constexpr specifier shall be applied only to the definition of a
variable or variable template, the declaration of a function or
function template, or the declaration of a static data member of a
literal type (3.9). If any declaration of a function, function
template, or variable template has a constexpr specifier, then all its
declarations shall contain the constexpr specifier. [Note: An explicit
specialization can differ from the template declaration with respect
to the constexpr specifier. Function parameters cannot be declared
constexpr. — end note ]
some examples given by the standard:
constexpr void square(int &x); // OK: declaration
constexpr int bufsz = 1024; // OK: definition
constexpr struct pixel { // error: pixel is a type
int x;
int y;
constexpr pixel(int); // OK: declaration
};
extern constexpr int memsz; // error: not a definition
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