At this moment of Jason Turner's 2016 CppCon talk "Practical Performance Practices", he mentions that full constexpr enabling of every data structure that can be (I'm guessing that means making every field and function constexpr that can be) can result in bigger code "because this causes more data structures to be compiled into your code so you have more data in the data segment than something that would be calculated at runtime" (this quote is kind of a combination of what he actually said at this time stamp and what he said at the end as an answer to a question about this topic).
I don't really understand what that means. Why would constexpr data structures compile to be bigger than non-constexpr data structures? Does anyone have an actual example that shows this?