Welcome to our lesson on "Access Specifiers in Inheritance" in C++! Access specifiers (public
, protected
, and private
) are key in object-oriented programming as they help control access to class members. This lesson will focus on understanding how these access specifiers work in inheritance.
By the end of this lesson, you'll know how access specifiers affect the accessibility of inherited class members.
In C++, access specifiers set the accessibility of class members (attributes and methods). The primary access specifiers are:
- public: Members are accessible from outside the class.
- protected: Members are accessible within the class and by derived class instances.
- private: Members are accessible only within the class declaring them.
These controls help ensure data encapsulation and security by preventing unauthorized access. We have already seen public and private specifiers in the previous course. Let's discuss the protected in deeper details.
The protected
specifier in C++ allows members to be accessible within the same class, as well as any derived classes. However, these members are not accessible from code that is outside the class hierarchy.
Let's consider the following example to understand the protected
specifier more clearly:
