How would you go about doing this in standard C++11/14 ? Because if I'm not mistaken this isn't standard compliant code with the anonymous structs.
I wish to access the members the same way as you would with this.
template <typename some_type>
struct vec
{
union {
struct { some_type x, y, z; };
struct { some_type r, g, b; };
some_type elements[3];
};
};
Yes, neither C++11 nor C++14 allow anonymous structs. This answer contains some reasoning why this is the case. You need to name the structs, and they also cannot be defined within the anonymous union.
§9.5/5 [class.union]
...
The member-specification of an anonymous union shall only define non-static data members. [ Note: Nested types, anonymous unions, and functions cannot be declared within an anonymous union. —end note ]
So move the struct definitions outside of the union.
template <typename some_type>
struct vec
{
struct xyz { some_type x, y, z; };
struct rgb { some_type r, g, b; };
union {
xyz a;
rgb b;
some_type elements[3];
};
};
Now, we require some_type
to be standard-layout because that makes all the members of the anonymous union layout compatible. Here are the requirements for a standard layout type. These are described in section §9/7 of the standard.
Then, from §9.2 [class.mem]
16 Two standard-layout struct (Clause 9) types are layout-compatible if they have the same number of non-static data members and corresponding non-static data members (in declaration order) have layout-compatible types (3.9).
18 If a standard-layout union contains two or more standard-layout structs that share a common initial sequence, and if the standard-layout union object currently contains one of these standard-layout structs, it is permitted to inspect the common initial part of any of them. Two standard-layout structs share a common initial sequence if corresponding members have layout-compatible types and either neither member is a bit-field or both are bit-fields with the same width for a sequence of one or more initial members.
And for the array member, from §3.9/9 [basic.types]
...
Scalar types, standard-layout class types (Clause 9), arrays of such types and cv-qualified versions of these types (3.9.3) are collectively called standard-layout types.
To ensure that some_type
is standard layout, add the following within the definition of vec
static_assert(std::is_standard_layout<some_type>::value, "not standard layout");
std::is_standard_layout
is defined in the type_traits
header. Now all 3 members of your union are standard layout, the two structs and the array are layout compatible, and so the 3 union members share a common initial sequence, which allows you to write and then inspect (read) any members belonging to the common initial sequence (the entire thing in your case).