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4 Standard conversions [conv]
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1 Standard conversions are implicit conversions defined for built-in
types. The full set of such conversions is enumerated in this clause.
A standard conversion sequence is a sequence of standard conversions
in the following order:
--Zero or one conversion from the following set: lvalue-to-rvalue con
version, array-to-pointer conversion, and function-to-pointer con
version.
--Zero or one conversion from the following set: integral promotions,
floating point promotion, integral conversions, floating point con
versions, floating-integral conversions, pointer conversions,
pointer to member conversions, and boolean conversions.
--Zero or one qualification conversion.
[Note: a standard conversion sequence can be empty, i.e., it can con
sist of no conversions. ] A standard conversion sequence will be
applied to an expression if necessary to convert it to a required des
tination type.
2 [Note: expressions with a given type will be implicitly converted to
other types in several contexts:
--When used as operands of operators. The operator's requirements for
its operands dictate the destination type. See _expr_.
--When used in the condition of an if statement or iteration statement
(_stmt.select_, _stmt.iter_). The destination type is bool.
--When used in the expression of a switch statement. The destination
type is integral (_stmt.select_).
--When used as the source expression for an initialization (which
includes use as an argument in a function call and use as the
expression in a return statement). The type of the entity being
initialized is (generally) the destination type. See _dcl.init_,
_dcl.init.ref_.
--end note]
3 An expression e can be implicitly converted to a type T if and only if
the declaration T t=e;" is well-formed, for some invented temporary
variable t (_dcl.init_). The effect of the implicit conversion is the
same as performing the declaration and initialization and then using
the temporary variable as the result of the conversion. The result is
an lvalue if T is a reference type (_dcl.ref_), and an rvalue other
wise. The expression e is used as an lvalue if and only if the decla
ration uses it as an lvalue.
4 [Note: For user-defined types, user-defined conversions are considered
as well; see _class.conv_. In general, an implicit conversion
sequence (_over.best.ics_) consists of a standard conversion sequence
followed by a user-defined conversion followed by another standard
conversion sequence.
5 There are some contexts where certain conversions are suppressed. For
example, the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion is not done on the operand of
the unary & operator. Specific exceptions are given in the descrip
tions of those operators and contexts. ]
4.1 Lvalue-to-rvalue conversion [conv.lval]
1 An lvalue (_basic.lval_) of a non-function, non-array type T can be
converted to an rvalue. If T is an incomplete type, a program that
necessitates this conversion is ill-formed. If the object to which
the lvalue refers is not an object of type T and is not an object of a
type derived from T, or if the object is uninitialized, a program that
necessitates this conversion has undefined behavior. If T is a non-
class type, the type of the rvalue is the cv-unqualified version of T.
Otherwise, the type of the rvalue is T. 1) If the lvalue refers to a
bit-field of type T, the resulting rvalue is not a bit-field.
2 The value contained in the object indicated by the lvalue is the
rvalue result. When an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion occurs within the
operand of sizeof (_expr.sizeof_) the value contained in the refer
enced object is not accessed, since that operator does not evaluate
its operand.
3 [Note: See also _basic.lval_. ]
4.2 Array-to-pointer conversion [conv.array]
1 An lvalue or rvalue of type "array of N T" or "array of unknown bound
of T" can be converted to an rvalue of type "pointer to T." The
result is a pointer to the first element of the array.
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1) In C++ class rvalues can have cv-qualified types (because they are
objects). This differs from ISO C, in which non-lvalues never have
cv-qualified types.
4.3 Function-to-pointer conversion [conv.func]
1 An lvalue of function type T can be converted to an rvalue of type
"pointer to T." The result is a pointer to the function.2)
2 [Note: See _over.over_ for additional rules for the case where the
function is overloaded. ]
4.4 Qualification conversions [conv.qual]
1 An rvalue of type "pointer to cv1 T" can be converted to an rvalue of
type "pointer to cv2 T" if "cv2 T" is more cv-qualified than "cv1 T."
2 An rvalue of type "pointer to member of X of type cv1 T" can be con
verted to an rvalue of type "pointer to member of X of type cv2 T" if
"cv2 T" is more cv-qualified than "cv1 T."
3 A conversion can add cv-qualifiers at levels other than the first in
multi-level pointers, subject to the following rules:3)
Two pointer types T1 and T2 are similar if there exists a type T and
integer N>0 such that:
T1 is cv1,0 pointer to cv1,1 pointer to ... cv1,n pointer to T
and
T2 is cv2,0 pointer to cv2,1 pointer to ... cv2,n pointer to T
where each cvi,j is const, volatile, const volatile, or nothing. An
expression of type T1 can be converted to type T2 if and only if the
following conditions are satisfied:
--the pointer types are similar.
--for every j>0, if const is in cv1,j then const is in cv2,j, and
similarly for volatile.
--if the cv1,j and cv2,j are different, then const is in every
cv2,k for 0<k<j.
[Note: if a program could assigned a pointer of type T** to a
pointer of type const T**, (that is, if line //1 below was allowed),
a program could inadvertently modify a const object (as it is done
on line //2). For example,
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2) This conversion never applies to nonstatic member functions because
an lvalue that refers to a nonstatic member function cannot be ob
tained.
3) These rules ensure that const-safety is preserved by the conver
sion.
main() {
const char c = 'c';
char* pc;
const char** pcc = &pc; //1
*pcc = &c;
*pc = 'C'; //2: modifies a const object
}
--end note]
4 A multi-level pointer to member type, or a multi-level mixed pointer
and pointer to member type has the form:
cv0P0 to cv1P1 ... cvnPn to T
where Pi is either a pointer or pointer to member and where T is not a
pointer type or pointer to member type.
5 For multi-level pointers to members and multi-level mixed pointers and
pointers to members, the rules for adding cv-qualifiers are the same
as those used for pointers; the "member" aspect of a pointer to member
level is ignored when determining if a cv-qualifier is added.
4.5 Integral promotions [conv.prom]
1 An rvalue of type char, signed char, unsigned char, short int, or
unsigned short int can be converted to an rvalue of type int if int
can represent all the values of the source type; otherwise, the source
rvalue can be converted to an rvalue of type unsigned int.
2 An rvalue of type wchar_t (_basic.fundamental_) or an enumeration type
(_dcl.enum_) can be converted to an rvalue of the first of the follow
ing types that can represent all the values of its underlying type:
int, unsigned int, long, or unsigned long.
3 An rvalue for an integral bit-field (_class.bit_) can be converted to
an rvalue of type int if int can represent all the values of the bit-
field; otherwise, it can be converted to unsigned int if unsigned int
can represent all the values of the bit-field. If the bit-field is
larger yet, it is not eligible for integral promotion. If the bit-
field has an enumerated type, it is treated as any other value of that
type for promotion purposes.
4 An rvalue of type bool can be converted to an rvalue of type int, with
false becoming zero and true becoming one.
5 These conversions are called integral promotions.
4.6 Floating point promotion [conv.fpprom]
1 An rvalue of type float can be converted to an rvalue of type double.
The value is unchanged.
2 This conversion is called floating point promotion.
4.7 Integral conversions [conv.integral]
1 An rvalue of an integer type can be converted to an rvalue of another
integer type. An rvalue of an enumeration type can be converted to an
rvalue of an integer type.
2 If the destination type is unsigned, the resulting value is the least
unsigned integer congruent to the source integer (modulo 2n where n is
the number of bits used to represent the unsigned type). [Note: In a
two's complement representation, this conversion is conceptual and
there is no change in the bit pattern (if there is no truncation). ]
3 If the destination type is signed, the value is unchanged if it can be
represented in the destination type (and bit-field width); otherwise,
the value is implementation-defined.
4 If the destination type is bool, see _conv.bool_. If the source type
is bool, the value false is converted to zero and the value true is
converted to one.
5 The conversions allowed as integral promotions are excluded from the
set of integral conversions.
4.8 Floating point conversions [conv.double]
1 An rvalue of floating point type can be converted to an rvalue of
another floating point type. If the source value can be exactly rep
resented in the destination type, the result of the conversion is that
exact representation. If the source value is between two adjacent
destination values, the result of the conversion is an unspecified
choice of either of those values. Otherwise, the behavior is unde
fined.
2 The conversions allowed as floating point promotions are excluded from
the set of floating point conversions.
4.9 Floating-integral conversions [conv.fpint]
1 An rvalue of a floating point type can be converted to an rvalue of an
integer type. The conversion truncates; that is, the fractional part
is discarded. The behavior is undefined if the truncated value cannot
be represented in the destination type. [Note: If the destination
type is bool, see _conv.bool_. ]
2 An rvalue of an integer type or of an enumeration type can be con
verted to an rvalue of a floating point type. The result is exact if
possible. Otherwise, it is an unspecified choice of either the next
lower or higher representable value. [Note: loss of precision occurs
if the integral value cannot be represented exactly as a value of the
floating type. ] If the source type is bool, the value false is con
verted to zero and the value true is converted to one.
4.10 Pointer conversions [conv.ptr]
1 An integral constant expression (_expr.const_) rvalue of integer type
that evaluates to zero (called a null pointer constant) can be con
verted to a pointer type. The result is a value (called the null
pointer value of that type) distinguishable from every pointer to an
object or function. Two null pointer values of the same type shall
compare equal.
2 An rvalue of type "pointer to cv T," where T is an object type, can be
converted to an rvalue of type "pointer to cv void." The result of
converting a "pointer to cv T" to a "pointer to cv void" points to the
start of the storage location where the object of type T resides, as
if the object is a most derived object (_intro.object_) of type T
(that is, not a base class subobject).
3 An rvalue of type "pointer to cv D," where D is a class type, can be
converted to an rvalue of type "pointer to cv B," where B is a base
class (_class.derived_) of D. If B is an inaccessible
(_class.access_) or ambiguous (_class.member.lookup_) base class of D,
a program that necessitates this conversion is ill-formed. The result
of the conversion is a pointer to the base class sub-object of the
derived class object. The null pointer value is converted to the null
pointer value of the destination type.
4.11 Pointer to member conversions [conv.mem]
1 A null pointer constant (_conv.ptr_) can be converted to a pointer to
member type. The result is a value (called the null member pointer
value of that type) distinguishable from a pointer to any member. Two
null member pointer values of the same type shall compare equal.
2 An rvalue of type "pointer to member of B of type cv T," where B is a
class type, can be converted to an rvalue of type "pointer to member
of D of type cv T," where D is a derived class (_class.derived_) of B.
If B is an inaccessible (_class.access_), ambiguous
(_class.member.lookup_) or virtual (_class.mi_) base class of D, a
program that necessitates this conversion is ill-formed. The result
of the conversion refers to the same member as the pointer to member
before the conversion took place, but it refers to the base class mem
ber as if it were a member of the derived class. The result refers to
the member in D's instance of B. Since the result has type "pointer
to member of D of type cv T," it can be dereferenced with a D object.
The result is the same as if the pointer to member of B were derefer
enced with the B sub-object of D. The null member pointer value is
converted to the null member pointer value of the destination type.4)
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4) The rule for conversion of pointers to members (from pointer to
member of base to pointer to member of derived) appears inverted com
pared to the rule for pointers to objects (from pointer to derived to
pointer to base) (_conv.ptr_, _class.derived_). This inversion is
necessary to ensure type safety. Note that a pointer to member is not
a pointer to object or a pointer to function and the rules for conver
4.12 Boolean conversions [conv.bool]
1 An rvalue of arithmetic, enumeration, pointer, or pointer to member
type can be converted to an rvalue of type bool. A zero value, null
pointer value, or null member pointer value is converted to false; any
other value is converted to true.
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sions of such pointers do not apply to pointers to members. In par
ticular, a pointer to member cannot be converted to a void*.