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So I have this code:

Node* SceneGraph::getFirstNodeWithGroupID(const int groupID)
{
    return static_cast<Node*>(mTree->getNode(groupID));
}

mTree->getNode(groupID) returns a PCSNode*. Node is publicly derived from PCSNode.

All of the docs I've found on static_cast say something to this effect: "The static_cast operator can be used for operations such as converting a pointer to a base class to a pointer to a derived class."

Yet, XCode's (GCC) compiler says that the static_cast is from PCSNode* to Node* is invalid and not allowed.

Any reason why this is? When I switch it to a C-style cast, there are no complaints from the compiler.

Thanks.

UPDATE: Even though the question was answered, I'll post the compiler error for completeness in case anyone else has the same problem:

error: Semantic Issue: Static_cast from 'PCSNode *' to 'Node *' is not allowed

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3  
Can you put the exact compiler error? Just to make sure there's nothing const-related or similar there. (by the information you describe it should work) – Shiroko Apr 27 '11 at 18:32
"Node is publicly derived from PCSNode"??? I guess you mean "PCSNode is publicly derived from Node" that is the same as "Node is a base class for PCSNode". Right? – Serge Dundich Apr 27 '11 at 21:37
PCSNode is actually the base class because it contains the pointers for the tree, Node is a transformational node that can be in a tree. – alk3ovation Jun 3 '11 at 17:07

1 Answer

up vote 8 down vote accepted

The reason is most likely that the definition of Node is not visible to the compiler (e.g., it may have been only forward-declared: class Node;).

Self-contained example:

class Base {};

class Derived; // forward declaration

Base b;

Derived * foo() {
    return static_cast<Derived*>( &b ); // error: invalid cast
}

class Derived : public Base {}; // full definition

Derived * foo2() {
    return static_cast<Derived*>( &b ); // ok
}
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That was it! Thanks! – alk3ovation Apr 27 '11 at 19:08

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