50

Below is a subtle example of accessing an instance's protected field x. B is a subclass of A so any variable of type B is also of type A. Why can B::foo() access b's x field, but not a's x field?

class A {
protected:
  int x;
};

class B : public A {
protected:
  A *a;
  B *b;
public:
  void foo() {
    int u = x;     // OK : accessing inherited protected field x
    int v = b->x;  // OK : accessing b's protected field x
    int w = a->x;  // ERROR : accessing a's protected field x
  }
};

Here is the error I get with g++

$ g++ -c A.cpp
A.cpp: In member function ‘void B::foo()’:
A.cpp:3: error: ‘int A::x’ is protected
A.cpp:14: error: within this context

6 Answers 6

28

Since B is publicly inherited from A, A's protected member(s) become B's protected member(s), so B can access its protected members as usual from its member function(s). That is, the objects of B can access the protected members of B from its member functions.

But A's protected members cannot be accessed outside the class, using object of type A.

Here is the relevant text from the Standard (2003)

11.5 Protected member access [class.protected]

When a friend or a member function of a derived class references a protected nonstatic member function or protected nonstatic data member of a base class, an access check applies in addition to those described earlier in clause 11.102) Except when forming a pointer to member (5.3.1), the access must be through a pointer to, reference to, or object of the derived class itself (or any class derived from that class) (5.2.5). If the access is to form a pointer to member, the nested-name-specifier shall name the derived class (or any class derived from that class).

And the example follows from the Standard (2003) itself as:

[Example:

class B {
  protected:
  int i;
  static int j;
};

class D1 : public B {
};

class D2 : public B {
  friend void fr(B*,D1*,D2*);
  void mem(B*,D1*);
};

void fr(B* pb, D1* p1, D2* p2)
{
  pb->i = 1; // ill-formed
  p1->i = 2; // ill-formed
  p2->i = 3; // OK (access through a D2)
  p2->B::i = 4; // OK (access through a D2, even though naming class is B)
  int B::* pmi_B = &B::i; // ill-formed
  int B::* pmi_B2 = &D2::i; // OK (type of &D2::i is int B::*)
  B::j = 5; // OK (because refers to static member)
  D2::j =6; // OK (because refers to static member)
}
void D2::mem(B* pb, D1* p1)
{
  pb->i = 1; // ill-formed
  p1->i = 2; // ill-formed
  i = 3; // OK (access through this)
  B::i = 4; // OK (access through this, qualification ignored)
  int B::* pmi_B = &B::i; // ill-formed
  int B::* pmi_B2 = &D2::i; // OK
  j = 5; // OK (because j refers to static member)
  B::j = 6; // OK (because B::j refers to static member)
}
void g(B* pb, D1* p1, D2* p2)
{
  pb->i = 1; // ill-formed
  p1->i = 2; // ill-formed
  p2->i = 3; // ill-formed
}
—end example]

Note in the above example fr() is a friend function of D2, mem() is a member function of D2, and g() is neither a friend, nor a member function.

8
  • 2
    Because it's public inheritance, A's protected members become B's protected members. Not private. Aug 8, 2011 at 18:41
  • @Billy: Correct. And Corrected the answer as well.
    – Nawaz
    Aug 8, 2011 at 18:44
  • In Public Ihneritance, The protected members of Base class become protected memebers of derived class & public members of base class become public members of derived class.
    – Alok Save
    Aug 8, 2011 at 18:44
  • But I am accessing "through a pointer to, reference to, or object of the derived class itself (or any class derived from that class)".
    – wcochran
    Aug 8, 2011 at 19:17
  • 2
    @David: In such cases, the derived class is making that call explicitly. I don't see how protected inheritance has anything to do with what we're talking about. Nawaz is talking solely about what happens when public inheritance is in play. (Besides, I don't know about you; I've never seen protected inheritance outside of a textbook) Aug 9, 2011 at 0:57
14

Consider:

class A {
protected:
  int x;
};

class C : public A
{
};

class B : public A {
protected:
  unique_ptr<A> a;
public:
  B() : a(new C) // a now points to an instance of "C"
  { }

  void foo() {
    int w = a->x;  // B accessing a protected member of a C? Oops.
  }
};
9
  • 1
    That doesn't explain it, because you would have the same argument if both a and foo were members of A (i.e., a could be an instance of C) -- but this compiles just fine with C++!
    – wcochran
    Aug 8, 2011 at 19:09
  • @wcochran: Not true. In this example, B is not in C's inheritance chain at all -- it shouldn't have access to any part of C. If both were members of A, then A would be in the inheritance chain of both classes. Aug 8, 2011 at 19:18
  • If I added a the field A *a; to A (forget 'B' for the moment), then a could be a ptr to an instance of type C -- same problem, compiles fine.
    – wcochran
    Aug 8, 2011 at 19:26
  • @wchchran: No, it does not. ideone.com/29pyK If that's not what you mean, post an example, and I'll explain. Aug 8, 2011 at 19:33
  • 1
    @wcochran: No, that's not the general OOP rule. The general OOP rule is that derived classes inherit the behavior of their base classes. Allowing that kind of access would be inheriting the behavior of C, even though C is not in B's inheritance hierarchy (and therefore is ill formed) Aug 9, 2011 at 0:53
3

In Public Inheritance:
All Public members of the Base Class become Public Members of the derived class &
All Protected members of the Base Class become Protected Members of the Derived Class.

As per the above rule:
protected member x from A becomes protected member of class B.

class B can access its own protected members in its member function foo but it can only access members of A through which it was derived not all A classes.

In this case, class B contains a A pointer a, It cannot access the protected members of this contained class.

Why can the B::foo() access the members of the contained class B pointer b?

The rule is:
In C++ access control works on per-class basis, not on per-object basis.
So an instance of class B will always have access to all the members of another instance of class B.

An Code Sample, which demonstrates the rule:

#include<iostream>

class MyClass 
{
    public: 
       MyClass (const std::string& data) : mData(data) 
       {
       }

       const std::string& getData(const MyClass &instance) const 
       {
          return instance.mData;
       }

    private:
      std::string mData;
};

int main() {
  MyClass a("Stack");
  MyClass b("Overflow");

  std::cout << "b via a = " << a.getData(b) << std::endl;
  return 0;
}
2
  • But x is a protected member of B in this example, and access is not allowed. I don't think this answers the question. Aug 8, 2011 at 18:48
  • 1
    @Billy ONeal: In C++ access control works on per-class basis, not on per-object basis, So a object of class B can access members of another object of class B.
    – Alok Save
    Aug 8, 2011 at 19:03
1

Why can B::foo() access b's x field, but not a's x field?

A protected member can only be accessed by other members of the same class (or derived classes).

b->x points to a protected member of an instance of class B (through inheritance), so B::foo() can access it.

a->x points to a protected member of an instance of class A, so B::foo() cannot access it.

0

Class B is not identical to class A. That's why members of class B cannot access non-public members of class A.

On the other hand, class B derives publicly from class A, so class B now has a (protected) member x which any member of class B can access.

0

Lets start with basic concept,

class A {
protected:
   int x;
};

class B : public A {
public:
  void foo() {
    int u = x;     // OK : accessing inherited protected field
  }
};

Since child is inheriting parent, child gets x. Hence you can access x directly in foo() method of child. This is the concept of protected variables. You can access protected variables of parent in child directly. Note : Here I am saying you can access x directly but not through A's object! Whats the difference ? Since, x is protected, you cannot access A's protected objects outside A. Doesnt matter where it is - If its main or Child . That's why you are not able to access in the following way

class B : public A {
protected:
  A *a;
public:
  void foo() {
    int u = x;     // OK : accessing inherited protected field x
    int w = a->x;  // ERROR : accessing a's protected field x
  }
};

Here comes an interesting concept. You can access a private variable of a class using its object with in the class!

class dummy {
private : 
int x;
public:
  void foo() {
    dummy *d;
    int y = d->x; // Even though x is private, still you can access x from object of d - But only with in this class. You cannot do the same outside the class. 
  }
};

//Same is for protected variables.Hence you are able to access the following example.

class B : public A {
protected:
  A *a;
  B *b;
public:
  void foo() {
    int u = x;     // OK : accessing inherited protected field x
    int y = b->x;   // OK : accessing b's protected field x
    int w = a->x;  // ERROR : accessing a's protected field x
  }
};

Hope it explains :)

C++ is complete Object Oriented Programming, where as Java is pure Object oriented :)

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