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Home/ Questions/Q 6327843
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T17:21:08+00:00 2026-05-24T17:21:08+00:00

I’m using gcc 4.6.1 and am getting some interesting behavior involving calling a constexpr

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I’m using gcc 4.6.1 and am getting some interesting behavior involving calling a constexpr function. This program runs just fine and straight away prints out 12200160415121876738.

#include <iostream>

extern const unsigned long joe;

constexpr unsigned long fib(unsigned long int x)
{
   return (x <= 1) ? 1 : (fib(x - 1) + fib(x - 2));
}

const unsigned long joe = fib(92);

int main()
{
   ::std::cout << "Here I am!\n";
   ::std::cout << joe << '\n';
   return 0;
}

This program takes forever to run and I’ve never had the patience to wait for it to print out a value:

#include <iostream>

constexpr unsigned long fib(unsigned long int x)
{
   return (x <= 1) ? 1 : (fib(x - 1) + fib(x - 2));
}

int main()
{
   ::std::cout << "Here I am!\n";
   ::std::cout << fib(92) << '\n';
   return 0;
}

Why is there such a huge difference? Am I doing something wrong in the second program?

Edit: I’m compiling this with g++ -std=c++0x -O3 on a 64-bit platform.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T17:21:09+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 5:21 pm

    joe is an Integral Constant Expression; it must be usable in array bounds. For that reason, a reasonable compiler will evaluate it at compile time.

    In your second program, even though the compiler could calculate it at compile time, there’s no reason why it must.

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