Will the following work as expected?:
struct A {};
struct B: public A {
int x;
};
void f( B* o ) {
std::cout << o->x << std::endl;
}
int main () {
B b;
b.x = 5;
reinterpret_cast<void(*)(A*)>(f)( &b );
}
Will the following work as expected?:
struct A {};
struct B: public A {
int x;
};
void f( B* o ) {
std::cout << o->x << std::endl;
}
int main () {
B b;
b.x = 5;
reinterpret_cast<void(*)(A*)>(f)( &b );
}
Its undefined behaviour to use such pointer after cast:
Any pointer to function can be converted to a pointer to a different function type. Calling the function through a pointer to a different function type is undefined, but converting such pointer back to pointer to the original function type yields the pointer to the original function.
From http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language
So the answer to your question is actually positive - you are allowed to cast but nothing more.
You might ask "what is the point of only casting?" - this is usefull when you want to store various functions in single collection.
See 5.2.10/6 [expr.reinterpret.cast]:
A function pointer can be explicitly converted to a function pointer of a different type. The effect of calling a function through a pointer to a function type that is not the same as the type used in the definition of the function is undefined.
That said, note as an example that C++ allows you to dereference a null pointer, so maybe allowed is not the right term.
The following command compiles too:
reinterpret_cast<void(*)(A*, int)>(f)( &b, 42 );
It is allowed, as well as the one in the question, no matter if it works as expected or not (it mostly depends on your expectations, as noted by @luk32 in the comments).
The answer to your question would be yes, the cast is allowed, but the invokation of the function through the new pointer leads to an undefined behavior.
reinterpret_cast
goes into off-limits. I believe there are similar statements for types too.
reinterpret
basically turns off type checking, and standard didn't want to deal with it. OPs case will probably work not matter what, but your's is a great example, where you can blow up things, and it's easy to check whether it makes sense or not.