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c++ - Class variables: public access read-only, but private access read/write

Whoopee, not working on that socket library for the moment. I'm trying to educate myself a little more in C++.

With classes, is there a way to make a variable read-only to the public, but read+write when accessed privately? e.g. something like this:

class myClass {
    private:
    int x; // this could be any type, hypothetically

    public:
    void f() {
        x = 10; // this is OK
    }
}

int main() {
    myClass temp;

    // I want this, but with private: it's not allowed
    cout << temp.x << endl;


    // this is what I want:

    // this to be allowed
    temp.f(); // this sets x...

    // this to be allowed
    int myint = temp.x;

    // this NOT to be allowed
    temp.x = myint;
}

My question, condensed, is how to allow full access to x from within f() but read-only access from anywhere else, i.e. int newint = temp.x; allowed, but temp.x = 5; not allowed? like a const variable, but writable from f()...

EDIT: I forgot to mention that I plan to be returning a large vector instance, using a getX() function would only make a copy of that and it isn't really optimal. I could return a pointer to it, but that's bad practice iirc.

P.S.: Where would I post if I just want to basically show my knowledge of pointers and ask if it's complete or not? Thanks!

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Of course you can:

class MyClass
{
    int x_;

public:
    int x() const { return x_; }
};

If you don't want to make a copy (for integers, there is no overhead), do the following:

class MyClass
{
    std::vector<double> v_;

public:
    decltype(v)& v() const { return v_; }
};

or with C++98:

class MyClass
{
    std::vector<double> v_;

public:
    const std::vector<double>& v() const { return v_; }
};

This does not make any copy. It returns a reference to const.


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