Possible Duplicate:
When does invoking a member function on a null instance result in undefined behavior?
Anything like this:
class Class {
public:
void Method()
{
//empty;
}
};
Class* object = 0;
object->Method();
is undefined behavior in C++ because calling non-static member functions via null pointers is formally illegal. See this answer for a detailed explanation full of quotes from the C++ Standard. I'm well aware of the theoretical part and this question is not about theory and so it's not a duplicate of that question.
In all implementations I'm aware of the code above or some equivalent thereof doesn't cause any observable problems - since the member function doesn't access the object the method will be called just fine.
May I have any real-life example in which the same setup causes practical observable problems?