Подскажите, пожалуйста, позволяют ли правила языков C
и C++
записывать в переменную типа enum
или enum class
некорректное значение?
В найденных мной источниках данный вопрос раскрывается недостаточно ясно.
Вот что написано в стандарте:
9) A value of a scoped enumeration type (10.2) can be explicitly converted to an integral type. When that type is cv bool, the resulting value is false if the original value is zero and true for all other values. For the remaining integral types, the value is unchanged if the original value can be represented by the specified type. Otherwise, the resulting value is unspecified. A value of a scoped enumeration type can also be explicitly converted to a floating-point type; the result is the same as that of converting from the original value to the floating-point type.
10) A value of integral or enumeration type can be explicitly converted to a complete enumeration type. If the enumeration type has a fixed underlying type, the value is first converted to that type by integral conversion, if necessary, and then to the enumeration type. If the enumeration type does not have a fixed underlying type, the value is unchanged if the original value is within the range of the enumeration values (10.2), and otherwise, the behavior is undefined. A value of floating-point type can also be explicitly converted to an enumeration type. The resulting value is the same as converting the original value to the underlying type of the enumeration (7.10), and subsequently to the enumeration type.
Написанное здесь я понимаю так:
const uint32_t value = 257;
enum class A
{
ONE = 1,
TWO,
THREE
};
const A a = const_cast<A>(value);// Undefined behavior
enum class B : uint8_t
{
ONE = 1,
TWO,
THREE
};
const B b = const_cast<B>(value);// Unspecified behavior
enum class C : uint32_t
{
ONE = 1,
TWO,
THREE
};
const C c = static_cast<C>(value);// OK
Я прав? И если нет, то в чем я ошибаюсь?