#include <iostream>
class A
{
public:
A()
{
std::cout << "\n A_Constructor \t" << this <<std::endl;
}
void A_Method()
{
std::cout <<"\n A_Method \t" << this <<std::endl;
}
};
class B:public A
{
public:
B()
{
std::cout <<"\n B_Constructor \n";
}
void B_Method()
{
std::cout <<"\n B_Method \t" << this <<std::endl;
}
};
int main()
{
A *a_obj = new A;
B *b_obj = static_cast<B*> (a_obj); // This isn't safe.
b_obj->B_Method();
getchar();
return 0;
}
OUTPUT :
A_Constructor 001C4890
B_Method 001C4890
As no run-time check isn't involved in type conversion, static_cast isn't safe. But in this example, I got what I didn't even expect. Since there is no call to B::B(), any of it's members should not be able to get called by b_obj. Despite that I got the output.
In this simple case, I might have succeeded though it is known unsafe. My doubts are -
- Though there is no call to
B::B(), how was I able to accessclass Bmember functions. - Can some one please provide an example, where this is unsafe and might get wrong( though what I given before might serve as a bad example, but even better).
I did it on Visual Studio 2010 and with \Wall option set.