delegating into private parts
- by FredOverflow
Sometimes, C++'s notion of privacy just baffles me :-)
class Foo
{
struct Bar;
Bar* p;
public:
Bar* operator->() const
{
return p;
}
};
struct Foo::Bar
{
void baz()
{
std::cout << "inside baz\n";
}
};
int main()
{
Foo::Bar b; // error: 'struct Foo::Bar' is private within this context
Foo f;
f->baz(); // fine
}
Since Foo::Bar is private, I cannot declare b in main. Yet I can call methods from Foo::Bar just fine. Why the hell is this allowed? Was that an accident or by design?