What is the purpose of a placeholder type in a trailing-return-type?

You can make an argument about consistency: you can stick other types as trailing return types, why not placeholders?

auto f() -> int&  { return i; }
auto f() -> auto& { return i; }

You can make an argument about utility: the return type for lambdas looks like a trailing return type and has no other place to put a placeholder type, so you have to allow it for lambdas anyway, so might as well allow it for functions?

auto f = []() -> int&  { return i; };
auto f = []() -> auto& { return i; };

You can make an argument about code formatting. The trailing return type allows for consistent way to declare functions that always works for all cases, so just lining it up:

auto g(auto x)     -> decltype(f(x)) { ... } // using trailing for parameter
auto Cls::member() -> type { ... }  // using trailing for scope (to find Cls::type)
auto h(auto x)     -> auto& { ... }  // using trailing for formatting

There might be other arguments. But in short, it's easy to allow and clearly has merit.


You can find the answer in the revision N3582 (2013-03-15)1 to the original proposal for auto:

auto in trailing-return-type

This proposal initially did not allow auto in a trailing-return-type, but since then it was pointed out that putting it there is the only way to specify that a lambda returns by a deduced reference type:

[]()->auto& { return f(); }

(Remember that not only functions but also lambdas can have a trailing-return-type)

Hence [dcl.spec.auto]/2:

The auto type-specifier may appear with a function declarator with a trailing-return-type ([dcl.fct]) in any context where such a declarator is valid.


1 Note: N3582 has been superseded by N3638 before it was actually adopted.