Safely converts pointers and references to classes up, down, and sideways along the inheritance hierarchy.
|
dynamic_cast< target-type>( expression) | | |
|
target-type | - | pointer to complete class type, reference to complete class type, or pointer to (optionally cv-qualified)void |
expression | - | lvalue(until C++11)glvalue(since C++11) of a complete class type iftarget-type is a reference, prvalue of a pointer to complete class type iftarget-type is a pointer |
[edit]Explanation
For the convenience of description, “expression or the result is a reference toT
” means that “it is a glvalue of typeT
”, which follows the convention ofdecltype
(since C++11).
Only the following conversions can be done withdynamic_cast, except when such conversions wouldcast away constness (or volatility).
1) If the type ofexpression is exactlytarget-type or a less cv-qualified version oftarget-type, the result is the value ofexpression with typetarget-type. In other words,dynamic_cast can be used toadd constness. An implicit conversion andstatic_cast can perform this conversion as well.
2) If
target-type is “pointer to (possibly cv-qualified)
Base
” and the type of
expression is “pointer to (possibly cv-qualified)
Derived
” such that
Base
is a base class of
Derived
, the result is
- a null pointer value ifexpression is a null pointer value, or
- a pointer to the unique
Base
subobject of theDerived
object pointed to byexpression otherwise. In other words,dynamic_cast can be used toupcast pointers, from derived to base. An implicit conversion andstatic_cast can perform this conversion as well.
3) Iftarget-type is “reference to (possibly cv-qualified)Base
” and the type ofexpression is “(possibly cv-qualified)Derived
” such thatBase
is a base class ofDerived
, the result is the uniqueBase
subobject of theDerived
object referred to byexpression. In other words,dynamic_cast can be used toupcast references, from derived to base. An implicit conversion andstatic_cast can perform this conversion as well.
4) If
expression is a null pointer value of a
polymorphic type, the result is the null pointer value of
target-type.
5) Otherwise,
expression must be a pointer or reference to an object of
polymorphic type within its
lifetime or within its period of construction or destruction whose type is
similar to the type of
expression (otherwise the behavior is undefined)
a) If
expression is a pointer to (possibly cv-qualified)
void, the result is a pointer to the
most derived object pointed to by
expression.
b) Otherwise a runtime check is applied to see if the object pointed/referred to byexpression can be converted to the typeTarget
, pointed or referred to bytarget-type:
i) If, in the most derived object pointed/referred to byexpression,expression points/refers to a public base class subobject of aTarget
object, and if only one object of typeTarget
is derived from the subobject pointed/referred to byexpression, the result points/refers to thatTarget
object. In other words,dynamic_cast can be used todowncast pointers/references, from base to derived.
ii) Otherwise, ifexpression points/refers to a public base class subobject of the most derived object, and the type of the most derived object has an unambiguous and public base class of typeTarget
, the result points/refers to theTarget
subobject of the most derived object. In other words,dynamic_cast can be used tocrosscast (or side-cast) pointers/references, between two types derived from the same base.
iii) Otherwise, the runtime check fails.
- Iftarget-type is a pointer type, the result is the null pointer value oftarget-type.
- Iftarget-type is a reference type, an exception of a type that would match ahandler of typestd::bad_cast is thrown.
Whendynamic_cast is used in a constructor or a destructor (directly or indirectly), andexpression refers to the object that's currently under construction/destruction, the object is considered to be the most derived object. Iftarget-type is not a pointer or reference to the constructor's/destructor's own class or one of its bases, the behavior is undefined.
Similar to other cast expressions, the result is:
- an lvalue iftarget-type is a reference type
- an rvalue iftarget-type is a pointer type
| (until C++11) |
- an lvalue iftarget-type is an lvalue reference type (expression must be an lvalue)
- an xvalue iftarget-type is an rvalue reference type (expressionmay be lvalue or rvalue(until C++17)must be a glvalue (prvalues arematerialized)(since C++17) of a complete class type)
- a prvalue iftarget-type is a pointer type
| (since C++11) |
A downcast can also be performed withstatic_cast, which avoids the cost of the runtime check, but it is only safe if the program can guarantee (through some other logic) that the object pointed to byexpression is definitelyDerived
.
Some forms ofdynamic_cast rely onrun-time type identification (RTTI), that is, information about each polymorphic class in the compiled program. Compilers typically have options to disable the inclusion of this information.
[edit]Keywords
dynamic_cast
[edit]Example
#include <iostream> struct V{virtualvoid f(){}// must be polymorphic to use runtime-checked dynamic_cast}; struct A:virtual V{}; struct B:virtual V{ B(V* v, A* a){// casts during construction (see the call in the constructor of D below)dynamic_cast<B*>(v);// well-defined: v of type V*, V base of B, results in B*dynamic_cast<B*>(a);// undefined behavior: a has type A*, A not a base of B}}; struct D: A, B{ D(): B(static_cast<A*>(this), this){}}; struct Base{virtual ~Base(){}}; struct Derived: Base{virtualvoid name(){}}; int main(){ D d;// the most derived object A& a= d;// upcast, dynamic_cast may be used, but unnecessary [[maybe_unused]] D& new_d=dynamic_cast<D&>(a);// downcast[[maybe_unused]] B& new_b=dynamic_cast<B&>(a);// sidecast Base* b1= new Base;if(Derived* d=dynamic_cast<Derived*>(b1); d!= nullptr){std::cout<<"downcast from b1 to d successful\n"; d->name();// safe to call} Base* b2= new Derived;if(Derived* d=dynamic_cast<Derived*>(b2); d!= nullptr){std::cout<<"downcast from b2 to d successful\n"; d->name();// safe to call} delete b1; delete b2;}
Output:
downcast from b2 to d successful
[edit]Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|
CWG 1269 | C++11 | the runtime check was not performed for xvalue expression s iftarget-type is an rvalue reference type | performed |
CWG 2861 | C++98 | expression could point/refer to a type-inaccessible object | the behavior is undefined in this case |
[edit]References
- C++23 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2024):
- 7.6.1.7 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
- C++20 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2020):
- 7.6.1.6 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
- C++17 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2017):
- 8.2.7 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
- C++14 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2014):
- 5.2.7 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
- C++11 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2011):
- 5.2.7 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
- C++98 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:1998):
- 5.2.7 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
- C++03 standard (ISO/IEC 14882:2003):
- 5.2.7 Dynamic cast [expr.dynamic.cast]
[edit]See also