// { dg-do assemble } // g++ 1.36.1 bug 900215_02 // g++ allows global objects (which happen to be pointers to members of some // class X) to be dereferenced without prefix object specifications within // member functions of class X. // In effect, g++ treats any dereference of a pointer-to-member which appears // within the context of a member function (and which is not preceeded by // either ->* or .*) as if it had been implicitly prefixed with this->*. // The 2.0 Reference Manual only provides that such implicit prefixing // takes place for *members* of the containing class, and *not* for // global objects that happen to have certain types (i.e. pointer-to-member // of the containing class). // Also, cfront 2.0 provides implicit this-> prefixes *only* for *members* // of the containing class. // Cfront 2.0 passes this test. // keywords: member pointers, this, dereference, members struct struct0 { int data_member; void function_member (); }; int struct0::*dmp; int (struct0::*fmp) (); int i; struct struct1 { int data_member; void function_member (); }; void struct0::function_member () { i = (this->*fmp) (); // perfectly legal - for both cfront and g++ i = this->*dmp; // perfectly legal - for both cfront and g++ i = (*fmp) (); // { dg-error "invalid use of unary '\\\*' on pointer to member" } i = *dmp; // { dg-error "invalid use of unary '\\\*' on pointer to member" } } int main () { return 0; }