In such cases, the 
requires-expression evaluates to 
false;
it does not cause the program to be ill-formed
.The substitution and semantic constraint checking
proceeds in lexical order and stops when a condition that
determines the result of the 
requires-expression is encountered
.If substitution (if any) and semantic constraint checking succeed,
the 
requires-expression evaluates to 
true.[
Note 1: 
If a 
requires-expression contains invalid types or expressions in
its 
requirements, and it does not appear within the declaration of a templated
entity, then the program is ill-formed
. — 
end note]
If the substitution of template arguments into a 
requirement
would always result in a substitution failure, the program is ill-formed;
no diagnostic required
.[
Example 3: 
template<typename T> concept C =
requires {
  new decltype((void)T{});      
};
 — 
end example]