I couldn't think of a better wording for the title, so it is a little misleading, however, I am not talking about a child accessing its variables inherited from its parent, which is easy enough.
What I am talking about is this:
class Parent {
protected:
Parent *target;
int hp;
}
cl...
@CharlesBailey bad answers. but it's interesting that member pointers can do this without casting. if johannes were here he could provide link to his comp.std.c++ posting about that (of course, if I were here I could provide link to my own earlier postings about that)
it seems to me that access should be based purely on type- that is, if you are a Parent and you make a variable protected, then all Child instances can access your protected variables
@DeadMG just as I said. if I derive AlfsClass from Base, and it uses protected state from Base, then don't want DeadMG class to derive from Base and change Base state of an AlfsClass instance, possibly breaking my assumptions (class invariant)
You can always work around it. It's there to prevent inadvertent mishaps only.
@DeadMG yeah, ideally. the rules are there to protect those who are not so cognizant of this.
@CharlesBailey hah! :-) but i think all people are more or less OCD about something. like, i don't like to write paragraphs with an even number of sentences.
This is so easy (meaning the apparent misunderstanding of the OP, is because people aren't taking the time to read the OP).
You simply make the child a friend of the parent's variable that you need to access.
Or, you can make the child a friend of the parent class.
That way any child has acces...
Go give that a look. I think I understands the OP better than others.
@Xaade Generally it's not a good idea to have a base class give friendship to a derived class... it makes it harder to derive other classes from the base class.
it's common misunderstanding, that when something can be explained in general terms, anything similar that you can express in general terms must be possible
Well, the only other option is to only allow other people to use an interface to the parent, and using that interface to represent public methods and variables. Otherwise, there is no known solution to his problem.
Not Withstanding the fact that his solution is bad to begin with.
@Xaade i didn't say it was a good idea. just wanted you to note that your "the only other option" is not quite correct, and that there are many known solutions. including one not mentioned here yet, a simple downcast, if type is actually derived's own.
@Alf hmm.... I've been misunderstanding that for a long time. IMO that seems so...... wrong. I mean, how do you keep data private from other instances?
I mean, it allows you to write copy constructors, and I thought that was the only place that worked, but still...... any class Person can affect other Person's "height" if they have a pointer to another Person. That seems to break OO.
@CharlesBailey It was pretty easy for me to pick up C# from C++. However, in C# there's a lot of language support for things that to me places the language syntax all over the place. So whereas you can do anything in C# out of the box, you may not know how to save yourself time using the language supported stuff.
@Xaade Well, I suppose you can read it like that... but I like to think of lambdas as function literals. A function that takes an n and delivers the result on the right side of the "rocket operarator" => ;-)
@AlfPSteinbach I don't have a C# compiler on my machine ATM :)
Honestly, I'm not sure why you are so offended. (And I have buried a kitten weeping, mind you.) It's a dead animal. Whenever I am in a car on the road (rarely ever, I don't drive), I see lots of them near the road, and there's no flagging.
@FredOverflow BTW, there's no moderators in the chat, only room owners. (I meant to add what privileges room owners have, but I just saw that you are an owner, too.)
@JohannesSchaublitb In C++0x, delete can be used to stop the compiler from providing default versions of special members functions. But I guess you already knew that ;)
@sbi I don't believe in the concept of ownership. As Homer Simpson once said: "Jede Form von Besitz ist flüchtig."
Anyway, what can I do as an owner of this room? :)
@FredOverflow Goto chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/info/10/loungec and find out. But please be careful. One thing you can do is damage. (I remember the time I setup a new feed, and that Feed guy dumped several dozen of messages on us within 2mins, practically drowning us.)
@FredO, @Johannes, @Charles This room was created by one who disappeared, so a new C++ room was setup by others. A mod stepped in objecting to two C++ rooms. He transferred ownership to those who had created the new room (which then was left to die). Since then it is somewhat of a room policy to make regulars into owners, to prevent this from happening again.
@AlfPSteinbach BTW i just sent a reply to a message that was crossposted to comp.lang.c++.moderated, comp.lang.c++ and comp.std.c++ . but my reply hasn't appeared anywhere
Anyway, as owners please keep up place tidy by adding new regulars (and removing those gone). I'd rather have a few to many owners than one to few, but please be careful. (It must have been one of the regulars who unpinned Roger's and my messages the other day.)
Sometimes it happens that an owner that wants to troll the channel unpins an important message from a chat list.
It happened 2 times in total now, for the C++ Channel. This is frustrating, because an owner that previously pinned a message can't pin it again, apparently.
Please show who unpinne...
@JamesMcNellis Isn't that good news? (Considering how offensive everyone seems to get towards moderators and candidates I can only see not being one as being a good thing.)
@JohannesSchaublitb Can take up to a day before someone processes it. The groups crossposted to should be OK. Other groups means -> bitbucket, not accepted.
@JohannesSchaublitb No -- if you cross-post to a moderated newsgroup, it gets turned into email to the moderator(s). It'll only appear in the un-moderated newsgroups when/if the moderator(s) release it for posting.
is looks like the New York Times is spamming Twitter #egypt with requests for photos. shame on them! some years ago they also made FireFox' BugMeNot not work, IIRC.
I haven't checked the specific issue, but be aware that pins are auto-removed after 14 days, because we found this feature to be abused too much.
If you feel so strongly about a particular message, why don't you just post it again and pin the new one?
"...be aware that pins are auto-removed after 14 days..."
@FredOverflow Well, since I shouted at people for no reason when that happened the other day, it should probably be me.
Anyway, that wouldn't explain the unpinning of Roger's message today, but I think we can put this down as an accident. Probably one which, whoever this happened to, didn't even realize.
@DeadMG Actually, that message is from two months ago. (Although there was an earlier, less informing message there before that.) And I keep updating those hint whenever I run into something new that I consider worthwhile. (Credit to @FredN who came up with the bookmark idea that allows this.)
@DeadMG (Fine with me, in case there was any doubt. :))
On a somewhat lighter note (well, at least for a few of us): Have you noticed that a quarter of the people currently in the room (it was a third until a few minutes ago) and a third of the room owners are Germans? I'd like to think that this is the reason why this room is so active. :)
@peoro Wow. Looking at this guys records: ~250 questions, most of them abysmally poor and/or off-topic, not a single answer, but >1.5k rep - this guy can edit tag wikis!
@sbi hum, I don't know... it looks like he's following some logic: his last three questions are "How RealVNC works ?", "Simplest way to make screenshots with C++" and "How to create a remote viewer for a games LAN party ?"
maybe he gave up about spamming and is now looking for a way to re-invent some sort of remote desktop in C++...
@peoro I have a better theory. He didn't give up on spamming, but his keylogger isn't giving him enough money. He probably wants to capture screencasts and have full access to victims machines to retrieve passwords from bank systems or make transactions directly from them. Makes sense?