7 Expressions [expr]

7.6 Compound expressions [expr.compound]

7.6.3 Explicit type conversion (cast notation) [expr.cast]

The result of the expression (T) cast-expression is of type T.
The result is an lvalue if T is an lvalue reference type or an rvalue reference to function type and an xvalue if T is an rvalue reference to object type; otherwise the result is a prvalue.
[Note 1:โ€‚
If T is a non-class type that is cv-qualified, the cv-qualifiers are discarded when determining the type of the resulting prvalue; see [expr.prop].
โ€” end note]
An explicit type conversion can be expressed using functional notation ([expr.type.conv]), a type conversion operator (dynamic_cast, static_cast, reinterpret_cast, const_cast), or the cast notation.
Any type conversion not mentioned below and not explicitly defined by the user ([class.conv]) is ill-formed.
The conversions performed by can be performed using the cast notation of explicit type conversion.
The same semantic restrictions and behaviors apply, with the exception that in performing a static_cast in the following situations the conversion is valid even if the base class is inaccessible:
  • a pointer to an object of derived class type or an lvalue or rvalue of derived class type may be explicitly converted to a pointer or reference to an unambiguous base class type, respectively;
  • a pointer to member of derived class type may be explicitly converted to a pointer to member of an unambiguous non-virtual base class type;
  • a pointer to an object of an unambiguous non-virtual base class type, a glvalue of an unambiguous non-virtual base class type, or a pointer to member of an unambiguous non-virtual base class type may be explicitly converted to a pointer, a reference, or a pointer to member of a derived class type, respectively.
If a conversion can be interpreted in more than one of the ways listed above, the interpretation that appears first in the list is used, even if a cast resulting from that interpretation is ill-formed.
If a conversion can be interpreted in more than one way as a static_cast followed by a const_cast, the conversion is ill-formed.
[Example 1:โ€‚struct A { }; struct I1 : A { }; struct I2 : A { }; struct D : I1, I2 { }; A* foo( D* p ) { return (A*)( p ); // ill-formed static_cast interpretation } โ€” end example]
The operand of a cast using the cast notation can be a prvalue of type โ€œpointer to incomplete class typeโ€.
The destination type of a cast using the cast notation can be โ€œpointer to incomplete class typeโ€.
If both the operand and destination types are class types and one or both are incomplete, it is unspecified whether the static_cast or the reinterpret_cast interpretation is used, even if there is an inheritance relationship between the two classes.
[Note 2:โ€‚
For example, if the classes were defined later in the translation unit, a multi-pass compiler would be permitted to interpret a cast between pointers to the classes as if the class types were complete at the point of the cast.
โ€” end note]