IMO, it's more important what's happening on the ground, that is, in the compilers, than the "official" status in the standardization pipeline. After all, we've had export in the standard and we all know where it went (in case you don't: nobody implemented it).
And on the ground things are looking pretty good: the big three (GCC, Clang, and VC) have modules supported to various degrees and are actively working on improving things.
And on the ground things are looking pretty good: the big three (GCC, Clang, and VC) have modules supported to various degrees and are actively working on improving things.