______________________________________________________________________ 11 Member access control [class.access] ______________________________________________________________________ 1 A member of a class can be --private; that is, its name can be used only by member functions and friends of the class in which it is declared. --protected; that is, its name can be used only by member functions and friends of the class in which it is declared and by member func tions and friends of classes derived from this class (see _class.protected_). --public; that is, its name can be used by any function. 2 Members of a class declared with the keyword class are private by default. Members of a class declared with the keywords struct or union are public by default. For example, class X { int a; // X::a is private by default }; struct S { int a; // S::a is public by default }; 3 Access control is applied uniformly to all names. 4 It should be noted that it is access to members and base classes that is controlled, not their visibility. Names of members are still visi ble, and implicit conversions to base classes are still considered, when those members and base classes are inaccessible. The interpreta tion of a given construct is established without regard to access con trol. If the interpretation established makes use of inaccessible member names or base classes, the construct is ill-formed. 5 All access controls in this clause affect the ability of an entire function or member function to access a class member. In particular, access controls apply as usual to members accessed as part of a func tion return type, even though it is not possible to determine the access privileges of that use without first parsing the rest of the function. For example: class A { typedef int I; // private member I f(); friend I g(I); static I x; }; A::I A::f() { return 0; } A::I g(A::I); A::I g(A::I p) { return 0; } A::I A::x = 0; Here, all the uses of A::I are well-formed because A::f and A::x are members of class A and g is a friend of class A. This implies, for example, that access checking on the first use of A::I must be deferred until it is determined that this use of A::I is as the return type of a member of class A. 11.1 Access specifiers [class.access.spec] 1 Member declarations can be labeled by an access-specifier (_class.derived_): access-specifier : member-specificationopt An access-specifier specifies the access rules for members following it until the end of the class or until another access-specifier is encountered. For example, class X { int a; // X::a is private by default: `class' used public: int b; // X::b is public int c; // X::c is public }; Any number of access specifiers is allowed and no particular order is required. For example, struct S { int a; // S::a is public by default: `struct' used protected: int b; // S::b is protected private: int c; // S::c is private public: int d; // S::d is public }; 2 The order of allocation of data members with separate access-specifier labels is implementation dependent (_class.mem_). 11.2 Access specifiers for base classes [class.access.base] 1 If a class is declared to be a base class (_class.derived_) for another class using the public access specifier, the public members of the base class are accessible as public members of the derived class and protected members of the base class are accessible as protected members of the derived class. If a class is declared to be a base class for another class using the protected access specifier, the pub lic and protected members of the base class are accessible as pro tected members of the derived class. If a class is declared to be a base class for another class using the private access specifier, the public and protected members of the base class are accessible as pri vate members of the derived class1). 2 In the absence of an access-specifier for a base class, public is assumed when the derived class is declared struct and private is assumed when the class is declared class. For example, class B { /* ... */ }; class D1 : private B { /* ... */ }; class D2 : public B { /* ... */ }; class D3 : B { /* ... */ }; // `B' private by default struct D4 : public B { /* ... */ }; struct D5 : private B { /* ... */ }; struct D6 : B { /* ... */ }; // `B' public by default class D7 : protected B { /* ... */ }; struct D8 : protected B { /* ... */ }; Here B is a public base of D2, D4, and D6, a private base of D1, D3, and D5, and a protected base of D7 and D8. 3 Because of the rules on pointer conversion (_conv.ptr_), a static mem ber of a private base class might be inaccessible as an inherited name, but accessible directly. For example, class B { public: int mi; // nonstatic member static int si; // static member }; class D : private B { }; class DD : public D { void f(); }; void DD::f() { mi = 3; // error: mi is private in D si = 3; // error: si is private in D B b; b.mi = 3; // okay (b.mi is different from this->mi) b.si = 3; // okay (b.si is different from this->si) B::si = 3; // okay B* bp1 = this; // error: B is a private base class B* bp2 = (B*)this; // okay with cast bp2->mi = 3; // okay: access through a pointer to B. } _________________________ 1) As specified previously in _class.access_, private members of a base class remain inaccessible even to derived classes unless friend declarations within the base class declaration are used to grant ac cess explicitly. 4 A base class is said to be accessible if an invented public member of the base class is accessible. If a base class is accessible, one can implicitly convert a pointer to a derived class to a pointer to that base class (_conv.ptr_, _conv.mem_). It follows that members and friends of a class X can implicitly convert an X* to a pointer to a private or protected immediate base class of X. 11.3 Access declarations [class.access.dcl] 1 The access of a member of a base class can be changed in the derived class by mentioning its qualified-id in the derived class declaration. Such mention is called an access declaration. The base class member is given, in the derived class, the access in effect in the derived class declaration at the point of the access declaration. The effect of an access declaration qualified-id ; is defined to be equivalent to the declaration using qualified-id ;.2) 2 For example, class A { public: int z; int z1; }; class B : public A { int a; public: int b, c; int bf(); protected: int x; int y; }; class D : private B { int d; public: B::c; // adjust access to `B::c' B::z; // adjust access to `A::z' A::z1; // adjust access to `A::z1' int e; int df(); protected: B::x; // adjust access to `B::x' int g; }; _________________________ 2) Access declarations are deprecated; member using-declarations (_namespace.udecl_) provide a better means of doing the same things. In earlier versions of the C++ language, access declarations were more limited; they were generalized and made equivalent to using declara tions in the interest of simplicity. Programmers are encouraged to use using, rather than the new capabilities of access declarations, in new code. class X : public D { int xf(); }; int ef(D&); int ff(X&); The external function ef can use only the names c, z, z1, e, and df. Being a member of D, the function df can use the names b, c, z, z1, bf, x, y, d, e, df, and g, but not a. Being a member of B, the func tion bf can use the members a, b, c, z, z1, bf, x, and y. The func tion xf can use the public and protected names from D, that is, c, z, z1, e, and df (public), and x, and g (protected). Thus the external function ff has access only to c, z, z1, e, and df. If D were a pro tected or private base class of X, xf would have the same privileges as before, but ff would have no access at all. 11.4 Friends [class.friend] 1 A friend of a class is a function that is not a member of the class but is permitted to use the private and protected member names from the class. The name of a friend is not in the scope of the class, and the friend is not called with the member access operators (_expr.ref_) unless it is a member of another class. The following example illus trates the differences between members and friends: class X { int a; friend void friend_set(X*, int); public: void member_set(int); }; void friend_set(X* p, int i) { p->a = i; } void X::member_set(int i) { a = i; } void f() { X obj; friend_set(&obj,10); obj.member_set(10); } 2 When a friend declaration refers to an overloaded name or operator, only the function specified by the parameter types becomes a friend. A member function of a class X can be a friend of a class Y. For example, class Y { friend char* X::foo(int); // ... }; All the functions of a class X can be made friends of a class Y by a single declaration using an elaborated-type-specifier3) _________________________ 3) Note that the class-key of the elaborated-type-specifier is re quired. (_class.name_): class Y { friend class X; // ... }; Declaring a class to be a friend also implies that private and pro tected names from the class granting friendship can be used in the class receiving it. For example, class X { enum { a=100 }; friend class Y; }; class Y { int v[X::a]; // ok, Y is a friend of X }; class Z { int v[X::a]; // error: X::a is private }; 3 A function declared as a friend and not previously declared, is intro duced in the smallest enclosing non-class, non-function prototype scope that contains the friend declaration. For a class mentioned as a friend and not previously declared, see _dcl.type.elab_. 4 A function first declared in a friend declaration has external linkage (_basic.link_). Otherwise, it retains its previous linkage (_dcl.stc_). No storage-class-specifier shall appear in the decl- specifier-seq of a friend declaration. 5 A function of namespace scope can be defined in a friend declaration of a non-local class (_class.local_). The function is then inline. A friend function defined in a class is in the (lexical) scope of the class in which it is defined. A friend function defined outside the class is not. 6 Friend declarations are not affected by access-specifiers (_class.mem_). 7 Friendship is neither inherited nor transitive. For example, class A { friend class B; int a; }; class B { friend class C; }; class C { void f(A* p) { p->a++; // error: C is not a friend of A // despite being a friend of a friend } }; class D : public B { void f(A* p) { p->a++; // error: D is not a friend of A // despite being derived from a friend } }; 11.5 Protected member access [class.protected] 1 A friend or a member function of a derived class can access a pro tected static member, type or enumerator constant of a base class; if the access is through a qualified-id, the nested-name-specifier must name the derived class (or any class derived from that class). 2 A friend or a member function of a derived class can access a pro tected nonstatic member of a base class. Except when forming a pointer to member, the access must be through a pointer to, reference to, or object of the derived class itself (or any class derived from that class). If the nonstatic protected member thus accessed is also qualified, the qualification is ignored for the purpose of this access checking. If the access is to form a pointer to member (_expr.unary.op_), the nested-name-specifier shall name the derived class (or any class derived from that class). For example, class B { protected: int i; static int j; }; class D1 : public B { }; class D2 : public B { friend void fr(B*,D1*,D2*); void mem(B*,D1*); }; void fr(B* pb, D1* p1, D2* p2) { pb->i = 1; // illegal p1->i = 2; // illegal p2->i = 3; // ok (access through a D2) p2->B::i = 4; // ok (access through a D2, qualification ignored) int B::* pmi_B = &B::i; // illegal int B::* pmi_B = &D2::i; // ok (type of &D2::i is "int B::*") B::j = 5; // illegal D2::j =6; // ok (access through a D2) } void D2::mem(B* pb, D1* p1) { pb->i = 1; // illegal p1->i = 2; // illegal i = 3; // ok (access through `this') B::i = 4; // ok (access through `this', qualification ignored) j = 5; // ok (static member accessed by derived class function) B::j = 6; // illegal } void g(B* pb, D1* p1, D2* p2) { pb->i = 1; // illegal p1->i = 2; // illegal p2->i = 3; // illegal } 11.6 Access to virtual functions [class.access.virt] 1 The access rules (_class.access_) for a virtual function are deter mined by its declaration and are not affected by the rules for a func tion that later overrides it. For example, class B { public: virtual int f(); }; class D : public B { private: int f(); }; void f() { D d; B* pb = &d; D* pd = &d; pb->f(); // ok: B::f() is public, // D::f() is invoked pd->f(); // error: D::f() is private } Access is checked at the call point using the type of the expression used to denote the object for which the member function is called (B* in the example above). The access of the member function in the class in which it was defined (D in the example above) is in general not known. 11.7 Multiple access [class.paths] 1 If a name can be reached by several paths through a multiple inheri tance graph, the access is that of the path that gives most access. For example, class W { public: void f(); }; class A : private virtual W { }; class B : public virtual W { }; class C : public A, public B { void f() { W::f(); } // ok }; Since W::f() is available to C::f() along the public path through B, access is allowed.