#include
using namespace std;
class A
{
private:
int value;
public:
A(int init):value(init){}
void changevalue(A &am
private
doesn't mean "private to the object identity" but "private to the type (and friends)".
Note that accessibility and being able to write to the type are orthogonal concepts. You can always access a private value inside an object of your own type, but whether you can write to it or not depends on if the object is declared as const
:
void f(A& a){ a.value = 4; } // OK: 'a' is not 'const'
void g(A const& a){ a.value = 4 } // error: 'a' is marked as ' const'
Because class access specifier apply on per class basis and not per object basis.
You can always modify the same type of object inside the class functions.Usual examples are copy constructor and copy assignment operator.