After reading here a lot of answers about C-style casting in C++ I still have one little question. Can I use C-style casting for built-in types like long x=(long)y; or it's still considered bad and dangerous?
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I would not, for the following reasons:
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Don't use them, ever. The reasons against using them applies here as well. Basically, once you use them, all bets are off because the compiler won't help you any more. While this is more dangerous for pointers than for other types, it's potentially still dangerous and gives poor compiler diagnostics in the case of errors, whereas new style casts offer richer error messages since their usage is more constrained: Meyers cites the example of casting away Also, some other disadvantages apply regardless of the types, namely syntactic considerations: A C-style cast is very unobtrusive. This isn't good: C++ casts stand out clearly in the code and point to potentially dangerous code. They can also easily be searched for in IDEs and text editors. Try searching for a C-style cast in a large code and you'll see how hard this is. On the other hand, C-style casts offer no advantages over C++ casts so there's not even a trade-off to consider. More generally, Scott Meyers advises to “Minimize casts” in Effective C++ (item 27), because “casts subvert the type system.” |
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If you find you need to do a C-style cast (or a reinterpret_cast) then look very carefully at your code it is 99.99% certain there is something wrong with it. Both these casts leed almost inevitably to implementation specific (and very often undefined) behaviour. |
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I think it may be OK given the context. Example:
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I can think of one legitimate use for a C-style cast:
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In my opinion C-Style casting of built in types when using standard library functions and STL is ok, and results in easier to read code. In the company I work in we compile with maximum (level 4) warnings, so we get warnings about every little type cast etc... So I use c-style casts in these because they're small, not so verbose and make sense.
etc.... But if its on (eg library) code that may change, then static_cast<>() is better because you can ensure the compiler will error out if types change and the cast no longer makes sense. Also, its impossible to search for casts within code if you only use c-style. " |
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Why do you need that particular cast? Any numeric type can be converted to a long without a cast (at potential loss of precision), so casting doesn't let the compiler do anything it can't already. By casting, all you do is remove the compiler's ability to warn if there is a potential problem. If you're converting some other basic type (like a pointer), to a long, I'd really like to see a reinterpret_cast<> rather than a C-type cast, so I can find what's going on easily if there turns out to be a problem. I'm not going to approve of casting without a reason, and I'm certainly not going to approve of C-type casts without a good reason. I don't see a reason to cast between most built-in types, and if there is one I want to be able to find it easily with a text search. |
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If you are casting from a numeric type, to another numeric type, then I think C-style casts are preferable to
and there is an additional stylistic reason to avoid them:
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The one case where I prefer legacy C cast is casting byte buffers to different signedness. Many APIs have different conventions, and there is no "right answer" really, and the cast is not dangerous in the context it is done, where code needs to be only as platform-agnostic as the combination of libraries being used. A concrete example for what I mean, I think this is just fine:
But for anything else, if cast is needed, it is going to have potential side-effects, which should stand out, and using C++ style (arguably ugly) cast is the right choice. And if cast is not needed, then don't use cast. |
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