In C++, the operator ::
is used to access classes, functions and variables in a namespace or class.
If the language specification used .
instead of ::
in those cases too like when accessing instance variables/methods of an object then would that cause possible ambiguities that aren't present with ::
?
Given that C++ doesn't allow variable names that are also a type name, I can't think of a case where that could happen.
Clarification: I'm not asking why ::
was chosen over .
, just if it could have worked too?