I've stored a pointer to a type_info
object.
int MyVariable = 123;
const std::type_info* Datatype = &typeid(MyVariable);
How might I use this to typecast another variable to that type? I tried this, but it doesn't work:
std::cout << ((*Datatype)3.14) << std::endl;
Using the function form of typecasting doesn't work, either:
std::cout << (*Datatype(3.14)) << std::endl;
Simply you cannot do that using type_info
. Also, in your example DataType
is not a type, it's a pointer to an object of type type_info
. You cannot use it to cast. Casting requires type, not pointer or object!
In C++0x, you can do this however,
int MyVariable = 123;
cout << (decltype(MyVariable))3.14 << endl;
cout << static_cast<decltype(MyVariable)>(3.14) << endl;
Output:
3
3
Online Demo: http://www.ideone.com/ViM2w
I don't think such casting can be done. Suppose you could do "dynamic" casting like this at runtime (not to mean dynamic_cast
). Then if you used the result of the cast to call a function the compiler could no longer do type checking on the parameters and you could invoke a function call that doesn't actually exist.
Therefore it's not possible for this to work.
Typecasting isn't a run-time process, it's a compile-time process at least for the type you're casting to. I don't think it can be done.
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