access private members in inheritance
Solution 1
Quick answer: You don't. Thats what the protected
key-word is for, which you want to use if you want to grant access to subclasses but no-one else.
private
means that no-one has access to those variables, not even subclasses.
If you cannot change code in A
at all, maybe there is a public
/protected
access method for that variable. Otherwise these variables are not meant to be accessed from subclasses and only hacks can help (which I don't encourage!).
Solution 2
Private members of a base class can only be accessed by base member functions (not derived classes). So you have no rights not even a chance to do so :)
class Base
- public: can be accessed by anybody
- private: can only be accessed by only base member functions (not derived classes)
- protected: can be accessed by both base member functions and derived classes
Solution 3
Well, if you have access to base class, you can declare class B as friend class. But as others explained it: because you can, it does not mean it's good idea. Use protected members, if you want derived classes to be able to access them.
Solution 4
It is doable as describe in this Guru of the Week - GotW #76 - Uses and Abuses of Access Rights. But it's should be considered a last resort.
Solution 5
You need to define it as protected
. Protected members are inherited to child classes but are not accessible from the outside world.
Comments
-
ofer over 3 years
I have a class A, which have a field val declared as private. I want to declare a class B, that inherit from A and have an access to val. Is there a way to do it on C++?
I want to do it because I need to overload some functions of A, without changing A code at all.
Thanks.