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Re: [std-proposals] Translation-unit-local functions that access private class fields

From: Sebastian Wittmeier <wittmeier_at_[hidden]>
Date: Mon, 27 Apr 2026 05:02:32 +0200
As far as I understood the main purpose was to call the helpers from other class member functions of the class, as is typically done for private member functions. So having access to as programmer (and changing existing member functions) is necessary anyway, isn't it?   Or is your aim to just have outside access to private members? That would change the philosophy of the proposal.   Or is it just the order of the calls?  But helpers are normally called by the private funxtion, which is called by a public function?   -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von:André Offringa via Std-Proposals <std-proposals_at_[hidden]> Gesendet:So 26.04.2026 22:19 Betreff:Re: [std-proposals] Translation-unit-local functions that access private class fields An:std-proposals_at_[hidden]; CC:André Offringa <offringa_at_[hidden]>; On 4/26/26 8:44 PM, Sebastian Wittmeier via Std-Proposals wrote: I would agree, if you say the examples are too cumbersome, etc. But why shouldn't they work?   Maybe I misunderstood you — I thought they were examples of where having a private function would leak the private data, and if they were to be declared out of class it would be a loophole to access a private member from a class, outside the class definition. (If not, then I'm not sure what it then shows? It's not a loophole to access private members without it being inside the class -- the class must explicitly make it available.)   Why I think these private functions would by itself not create a loophole; If I look at your first example, your private function looks like this:   void Cube::innocentPrivateFunction() {     CubeHelper::getWidth = [](Cube& cube) {         return cube.width;     }; [..] }   If the private function would be called, it would indeed make the private members available via the helper. However, in my proposal and the one from 2013, it is not possible to call the private function without first having private access. So, in that example, if the private function would be an out-of-class definition for a private member function of an already existing class, it can never be called. The same holds for your second and third example where you use pointers instead of lambdas. So, if that private function would be definable out-of-class, it wouldn't break private access. (but apologies if I misunderstood the intention of your examples).   However, it is possible to leak data, basically by triggering the instantiation of a templated class inside the private function (see example in the 2013 proposal). If the class has static variables, they will be initialized, and this causes code to run merely by having the function without it being called, and via decltype it is then possible to run code that has access to the private data. So, very involved...   Regards, André       [I had abbreviated some for clearer presentation. E.g. declared function pointers have to be defined or some code has to be in a different order (complete ancestor class visible), or a constructor has to be created. So they were not copy&paste.]   -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: André Offringa via Std-Proposals <std-proposals_at_[hidden]> <mailto:std-proposals_at_[hidden]> Gesendet: So 26.04.2026 19:47 Betreff: Re: [std-proposals] Translation-unit-local functions that access private class fields An: std-proposals_at_[hidden] <mailto:std-proposals_at_[hidden]> ; CC: André Offringa <offringa_at_[hidden]> <mailto:offringa_at_[hidden]> ;   On 4/26/26 1:08 PM, Sebastian Wittmeier via Std-Proposals wrote: Please look at N3863 and its discussions on this list: https://github.com/mateofio/stdcxx-privext     Thanks, I was not aware of this proposal. Interesting to see that it proposes the same feature as that I was proposing, including the use of the keyword private for it. The only difference I see is that the proposal would not by default make the private extension methods have internal linkage, whereas I'm proposing to do that. In the mailing lists from 2013 I see there's mostly support for the feature. People prefer internal linkage as default, which makes it the same as what I'm proposing.   I had a look at the examples that Sebastian mailed, but I don't think that any of them work to circumvent the privateness of class fields. That said, in the proposal there is an example way to abuse private methods to break private access, but the method is quite contrived. It also mentions that there are already other ways to break private access. The proposal discusses why adding an extra (contrived) way of breaking private access isn't a showstopper.   Unless I missed parts of the thread, I don't see strong arguments or opinions against it. Does anyone know why the proposal didn't progress? Counter arguments that were mentioned in the mailing list (and mostly discussed already in that proposal) : - Provides new ways of breaking private access - There is some mentioning that modules (at that time, 2013) could provide a better solution - Preference seems generally to be to make it default internal linkage (as I propose), thereby avoid the need for another meaning of static as the old proposal did. The author of the proposal mentions somewhere in the mailing thread that they will update the proposal with that, but that seems not to have happened (?). - I see one mail about that it adds complexity to compilers. I say that's a fair counter argument, but could be explored. - There are alternative approaches to reach something similar, though I think none are a perfect substitute. - Someone preferred the ability to reopen class scope. This seems to me a more intrusive option, though could indeed be used to reach the goal. - There's discussion on the syntax for making a private method have external linkage. I think that's more niche. Maybe it would be better to scope the proposal to not include that for now but only mention it as a future possible addition. Regards, André     -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: André Offringa via Std-Proposals <std-proposals_at_[hidden]> <mailto:std-proposals_at_[hidden]> Gesendet: Sa 25.04.2026 22:46 Betreff: [std-proposals] Translation-unit-local functions that access private class fields An: std-proposals_at_[hidden] <mailto:std-proposals_at_[hidden]> ; CC: André Offringa <offringa_at_[hidden]> <mailto:offringa_at_[hidden]> ; Hi all, I was wondering what people think of the following idea. The problem I'm trying to address is that if we want to introduce a helper method for a class, we have to declare this helper function in the class, e.g. assume this situation: == Header file: == class Foo { public:   void A(); private:   void Helper();   int value_; }; == Unit file: == void Foo::A() {   ...   Helper();   ... } void Foo::Helper() {   ...   value_ = ...;   ... } I think it would be useful if there would be a way to skip the declaration of the Helper method inside the class (in the header file), and make it translation local just like a static function or function inside an anonymous namespace would be. From the compiler's point of view, it could then act as a translation-unit-local function, except with the possibility to access (private) class fields. The benefit is that the method is no longer part of the "interface" of the class, and this is useful because it is, after all, an implementation detail of the class. This makes it also no longer necessary to have the parameter types and return value type declared in the header file, which decreases dependencies between files. An example of how this could look like, could be to use the keyword 'private' and let it act as an identifier for declaring such a function, e.g.: == Header file: == class Foo { public:   void A(); private:   int value_; } == Unit file: == private void Foo::Helper() {   ...   value_ = ...;   ... } void Foo::A() {   ...   Helper();   ... } Of course the syntax is open for discussion. The idea is that Helper() is now a private translation-unit-local function that receives the 'this' pointer and access to private fields. The function itself acts in name lookup as a free function, to avoid participating in member lookup, but is only visible inside class member functions or other private translation-unit-local functions, and is not accessible outside of that. This makes it somewhat between a member function and a free function. With such an approach, it can not be used to access private fields from a scope that does not allow access to those fields. Hence, the class data remains encapsulated. It should not modify the layout of the class and not change its ABI. There are more details to think through. Thinking of alternatives, another direction to solve this would be to change the standard such that friend functions can be declared as friend outside of the class definition, instead of by introducing a function with special visibility rules. They would then behave as normal functions, which simplify some details. This makes private data too widely usable, so I don't see a good solution in that direction. Syntax aside, the problem I'm trying to solve is to have a function that: - has access to private members - is defined only in the unit file - does not require any declaration in the header - does not become part of the class interface I think the best existing alternative for this situation is to declare a static free function in the unit file that takes as parameter the class members it needs. In complex situations, this is not as nice. In pimpl implementations it is a reasonable solution, but a pimpl pattern is not always desired. I'm curious to hear what people think about the idea of private translation-unit-local functions. Kind regards, André Offringa -- Std-Proposals mailing list Std-Proposals_at_[hidden] <mailto:Std-Proposals_at_[hidden]> https://lists.isocpp.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/std-proposals -- Std-Proposals mailing list Std-Proposals_at_[hidden] <mailto:Std-Proposals_at_[hidden]> https://lists.isocpp.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/std-proposals -- Std-Proposals mailing list Std-Proposals_at_[hidden] https://lists.isocpp.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/std-proposals

Received on 2026-04-27 03:04:27