The bottom line is that unlike a global function pointer, a member function pointer is not just the address of the first instruction of the function in most implementations, apparently with the exception of the compiler by Digital Mars (the company behind the D language). That compiler generates "thunk code" which handles the differences between various dispatching mechanisms (virtual vs. statically dispatched functions, different kinds of inheritance), and uses the address of that thunk code to represent member function pointers. Quote from the article about this implementation: "Why doesn…