Difference between &(*similarObject) and similarObject? Are they not same?
Can someone please explain t开发者_如何学JAVAhis to me
dynamic_cast<SomeObject *>( &(*similarObject) );
What is the point of doing the address of a dereferenced pointer? Wouldn’t the pointer itself just be the address of it?
It may be that the type of similarObject
has overloaded operator*
and so it returns something whose address you're passing to dynamic_cast
.
&(*x)
and x
may not be always the same thing. For example, think of iterator:
std::map<int, int>::iterator it = v.begin();
Then it
and &(*it)
are two different thing:
- The type of
it
isstd::map<int, int>::iterator
- The type of
&(*it)
isstd::pair<int,int>*
They're not at all same. Similar thing may happen with your code-snippet as well.
If similarObject is a smart pointer, this technique is sometimes used to get the reference of a raw pointer, when * has been overloaded.
Nobody mentioned yet that similarObject
is an lvalue, whereas &*similarObject
is an rvalue.
精彩评论