If we have the following code:
struct Base
{
int x;
int y;
void foo();
virtual unsigned getCrc() = 0;
};
struct Derived1 : public Base
{
int a;
int b;
unsigned getCrc();
};
struct Derived2 : public Base
{
float a;
float b;
unsigned getCrc();
};
Is it C++ standard that a and b should be after x and y in memory?
Or it is the most used method for laying out inherited objected? (i.e. compiler defacto-standard).
In other words, can I guarantee that:
Derived1 obj;
int* unsafe_internal_a = (int*)((unsigned)(&obj) + sizeof(Base));
EDIT: My question is 'Is memory layout covered in some standard? Or it is compiler dependent?'. The code is just for illustration.
aandbwill always be afterxandybut there can be padding bytes added anywhere the compiler chooses to. – Alok Save Feb 10 at 14:58