Today i have a doubt regarding friend function.
Can two classes have same friend function?
Say example
friend void f1();
declared in class A and class B. Is this possible? If so, can a function f1() can access the members of two classes?
An example will explain this best:
class B; //defined later
void add(A,B);
class A{
private:
int a;
public:
A(){
a = 100;
}
friend void add(A,B);
};
class B{
private:
int b;
public:
B(){
b = 100;
}
friend void add(A,B);
};
void add (A Aobj, B Bobj){
cout << (Aobj.a + Bobj.b);
}
main(){
A A1;
B B1;
add(A1,B1);
return 0;
}
Hope this helps!
-
Thank you very much man ur example was very nice and easy to understand – user2236974 Aug 26 '13 at 6:41
There is no restriction on what function can or cannot be friends
's of class
's, so yes there's no problem with this.
-
Well, you have to be able to name the function, but that's a natural restriction. E.g.
struct { static void foo(); };
or functions in anonymous namespaces in other translation units. – MSalters Aug 23 '13 at 14:34
correction to the above code
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
class B; //defined later
class A; //correction (A also need be specified)
void add(A,B);
class A{
private:
int a;
public:
A(){
a = 100;
}
friend void add(A,B);
};
class B{
private:
int b;
public:
B(){
b = 100;
}
friend void add(A,B);
};
void add (A Aobj, B Bobj){
cout << (Aobj.a + Bobj.b);
}
main(){
A A1;
B B1;
add(A1,B1);
return 0;
}
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
class first
{
friend void getdata(first object1, int i);
};
class second
{
friend void getdata(second object2, int j);
};
getdata(first object1, int i, second object2, int j)
{
cout<<i+j;
}
main()
{
first object1;
second object2;
getdata(object1, 5, object2, 7);
}
-
friends functions are intended to have access to classes private members – Antonio Leite Sep 29 '18 at 13:41
f1()
would have access to members of both classes. – juanchopanza Aug 23 '13 at 13:39