I had a discussion with someone on IRC and this question turned up. We are allowed by the Standard to change an object of type int by a char lvalue.
int a;
char *b = (char*) &a;
*b = 0;
Would we be allowed to do this in the opposite direction, if we know that the alignment is fine?
The issue I'm seeing is that the aliasing rule does not cover the simple case of the following, if one considers the aliasing rule as a non-symmetric relation
int a;
a = 0;
The reason is, that each object contains a sequence of sizeof(obj) unsigned char objects (called the "object representation"). If we change the int, we will change some or all of those objects. However, the aliasing rule only states we are allowed to change a int by an char or unsigned char, but not the other way around. Another example
int a[1];
int *ra = a;
*ra = 0;
Only one direction is described by 3.10/15 ("An aggregate or union type that includes..."), but this time we need the other way around ("A type that is the element or non-static data member type of an aggregate...").
Is the other direction implied? This question also applies to C.
a = 0might not be allowed, as well as*ra = 0. With "Opposite direction" of "A foo containing bar" I mean "A bar contained by foo". What is unclear in particular? – Johannes Schaub - litb Jan 21 '11 at 14:29char a='A'; int *pi = (int*)a; *pi='B';, then I don't think such thing is safe to begin with. – Nawaz Jan 21 '11 at 15:02