EDIT:
Though badly formatted this Question had a nice catch.So, I am editing this to retain this in a better format for future visitors who stumble across this question.
In the code sample below can someone please explain Why is the size of class different than expected after memcpy? What is the reason?
Here is the online demo on Ideone.
#include<iostream>
#include<vector>
#include<cstdio>
#include<cstring>
using namespace std;
class A
{
public:
int a;
virtual void f1() { cout <<"inside a::f1\n"; }
A() { a = 1; }
};
class B
{
public:
int b;
virtual void f2() { cout <<"inside b::f2\n"; }
virtual void f5() { cout <<"inside b::f5\n"; }
B() { b = 2; }
};
class C : public A, public B
{
public:
int c;
void f1() { cout <<"inside c::f1\n"; }
void f2() { cout <<"inside c::f2\n"; }
virtual void f3() { cout <<"inside c::f3\n"; }
virtual void f4() { cout <<"inside c::f4\n"; }
C() { c = 3; }
};
int fun()
{
int a = 1;
return a * 2;
}
int main()
{
C c;
C c2;
int (*g)() = &fun;
void (A::*g1)() = &A::f1;
void (C::*g2)();
g2 = &C::f1;
(c.*g2)();
printf("%p\n",g2);
cout << sizeof(g2) << endl;
g2 = &C::f2;
(c.*g2)();
printf("%p\n", g2);
// Why is the output 1 here in g++ or visual C++?
cout << g2;
// Why is the sizeof returning 8? Please explain.
cout << sizeof(g2) << endl;
g2 = &C::f1;
std::vector<unsigned char> a_vec(sizeof(g2));
memcpy(&a_vec[0], &g2, sizeof(g2));
for(size_t i = 0; i < sizeof(g2); ++i)
{
cout << hex << static_cast<unsigned>(a_vec[i]) << " ";
}
cout << endl;
g2 = &C::f2;
std::vector<unsigned char> a_vec1(sizeof(g2));
memcpy(&a_vec1[0], &g2, sizeof(g2));
for(size_t i = 0; i < sizeof(g2); ++i)
{
cout << hex << static_cast<unsigned>(a_vec1[i]) << " ";
}
cout << endl;
cout << sizeof(g) <<endl;
cout << sizeof(g1) <<endl;
cout << sizeof(g2) <<endl;
// Why is sizeof(C) printing 14 and not 20 in visual C++?
// If yes why is this so ?
cout << sizeof(C) << endl;
cout << sizeof(c2) << endl;
cout << (&c) << endl;
cout << c.a << endl;
cout << c.b << endl;
cout << c.c << endl;
return 0;
}
From the above code sample the Output I get is:
inside c::f1
0x1
8
inside c::f2
0x5
18
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
4
8
8
14
14
0xbffe375c
1
2
3
Following are my Questions:
Why is the output
1here in g++ or visual C++?cout << g2;
Why is the
sizeofreturning8? Please explain.cout << sizeof(g2) << endl;
Why is
sizeof(C)printing14and not20in visual C++? If yes why is this so?cout << sizeof(C) << endl;
