of course, it was impossible to implement robustly in C++03, so they came up with a result-of protocol for how you were supposed to "hint" at what your return type was. So decltype solved a lot of problems there
I find it rather sad that C++ originally had auto type deduction in the eighties, but Bjarne was forced to take it out again... would have made many plumbing classes unnecessary.
(It wouldn't have helped with function return types, though. But maybe Bjarne would have extended the language with decltype much sooner.)
From your question and comments, it seems that you understand that you can have a const data member, but you don't understand what purpose(s) it can serve. Is that correct ?
If you have a piece of data that is constant for the life-time of an object, and is unique to the object, then it could sense to have it as a non-static const data member. However, can you think of an example where you would need this, and have you ever seen it either. Moreover, if you encapsulate the data member, it cannot be modified by code external to the class anyways and marking a non-static variable as const doesn't improve performance either.
Let's say you have a class Res which encapsulates some resource (lets say a file identifier)
Every instance of Res has its own file identifier and this one cannot change.
To ensure that this private file identifier don't change during the lifetime of your Res instance, you can declare it const.
It makes sense because the only way to first set it is in the constructor(s) of Res and since it is never meant to change, you can declare it const as to avoid potential programming errors.
it's a problem because they're both totally valid operations to perform, extremely useful to do, and you're disallowing them because you're too lazy to write a few extra lines in a template that will instantly solve the problem
and in return, you're going to make me, the user of your class, waste my life heap allocating it and managing the lifetime
it's a dumb idea to restrict the users of your class unless you have a damn good reason
even if you did have such a system that was real, then it would be in such the massive minority that it would be in all practicality irrelevant to the discussion