I am trying to learn about static_cast
and reinterpret_cast
.
If I am correct the standard (9.2.18) says that reinterpret_cast
for pod data is safe:
A pointer to a POD-struct object, suitably converted using a
reinterpret_cast
, points to its initial member (or if that member is a bit-field, then to the unit in which it resides) and vice versa. [ Note: There might therefore be unnamed padding within a POD-struct object, but not at its beginning, as necessary to achieve appropriate alignment. — end note ]
My question is how strictly to interpret this. Is, for example, layout-compatibility enough? and if not, why not?
To me, the following example shows an example where a strict 'only POD is valid' interpretation seems to be wrong.
class complex_base // a POD-class (I believe)
{
public:
double m_data[2];
};
class complex : public complex_base
{ //Not a POD-class (due to constructor and inheritance)
public:
complex(const double real, const double imag);
}
double* d = new double[4];
//I believe the following are valid because complex_base is POD
complex_base& cb1 = reinterpret_cast<complex_base&>(d[0]);
complex_base& cb2 = reinterpret_cast<complex_base&>(d[2]);
//Does the following complete a valid cast to complex even though complex is NOT POD?
complex& c1 = static_cast<complex&>(cb1);
complex& c2 = static_cast<complex&>(cb2);
Also, what can possibly break if complex_base::m_data
is protected (meaning that complex_base
is not pod)? [EDIT: and how do I protect myself/detect such breakages]
It seems to me that layout-compatibility should be enough - but this does not seem to be what the standard says.
EDIT: Thanks for the answers. They also helped me find this, http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2007/n2342.htm
What can break is that non-POD class instances may have vtable pointers, in order to implement virtual dispatch, if they have any virtual functions, including the virtual dtor. The vtbl pointer will typicaly be the first member of the non-POD class.
(Technically, virtual dispatch doesn't have to implemented this way; practically it is. That's why the Standard has to be so strict about what qualifies as a POD type.)
I'm honestly not sure why just having a ctor ("8.5.1(1): "An aggregate is an array or class (clause 9) with no user-declared constructors (12.1)") disqualifies something from being a POD. But, it does.
In the particular case you have here, of course, there's no need for a reinterpret cast. Instead, just add a conversion operator to the base class:
Since a complex_base isn't a double*, the C++ compiler will apply one (and only one) user-defined conversion operator in order to assign b to p. That means that
p = b
invokes the conversion operator, yieldingp = b.operator double*()
(and note that that's actually legal syntax -- you can directly call conversion operators, not that you should), which of course does whatever it does, in this case return m_data.Note that this is questionable, as we now have direct access to b's internals. In practice, we might return a const double*, or a copy, or a smart copy-on-write "pointer" or ....
Of course, in this case, m_data is public anyway, so we're not worse off than if we just wrote:
We are a bit better off, actually, because clients of complex_base don't need to know how to convert it to a double.
You are wrong.
d[0]
does not refer to the first member of acomplex_base
object. Its alignment may therefor not be good enough for acomplex_base
object, therefor such a cast is not safe (and not allowed by the text you quote).cb1
andcb2
do not point to subobjects of an object of typecomplex
, therefor thestatic_cast
produces undefined behavior. Refer to 5.2.9p5 of C++03It's not enough if merely the types involved fit together. The text talks about a pointer pointing to a POD-struct object and about an lvalue referring to a certain subobject. oth complex and complex_base are standard-layout objects. The C++0x spec says, instead of the text you quoted:
Is POD-ness requirement too strict?
This is a different question, not regarding your example code. Yes, requiring POD-ness is too strict. In C++0x this was recognized, and a new requirement which is more loose, "standard-layout" is given. I do think that both
complex
andcomplex_base
are standard-layout classes, by the C++0x definition. The C++0x spec says, instead of the text you quoted:I interpret that as allowing to cast a pointer to a
double
, which actually points to acomplex
member (member by inheritance), to be casted to acomplex*
. A Standard-layout class is one that either has no base classes containing non-static data, or has only one base-class containing non-static data. Thus there is an unique "initial member".