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Home/ Questions/Q 8090299
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 5, 20262026-06-05T19:40:21+00:00 2026-06-05T19:40:21+00:00

I’ve found a simple solution somewhere on the internet to an identity class without

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I’ve found a simple solution somewhere on the internet to an identity class without built-in C++ RTTI.

template <typename T>
class Identity {
public:
    static int64_t id()
    {
        static int64_t dummy;
        return reinterpret_cast<int64_t>(&dummy);
    }
};

When we need some class ID, we just use:

Identity<OurClass>::id();

I’m wondering, are there any collisions? Can it return the same ID for the different classes, or the different ID for the same classes? I have tried this code with g++ with different optimization values, everything seems ok.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-05T19:40:23+00:00Added an answer on June 5, 2026 at 7:40 pm

    First off: there is such an integral type that is made specifically to contain pointers:

    • intptr_t
    • and in C++11 uintptr_t

    Second, even though in practice on gcc they are equal, the size of a pointer to an object and the size of a function pointer (or pointer to member) might well be different. Therefore it would be better using a specific object rather than the method itself (for Standard conformance).

    Third, it only gives you identity, while RTTI is much richer, as it knows about all the subclasses a given object can be cast to, and even allows cross-casts or casts across virtual inheritance.

    Still, the corrected version can be useful I guess:

    struct Foo {
        static intptr_t Id() {
            static boost::none_t const Dummy = {};
            return reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(&Dummy);
        }
    };
    

    And in hierarchies, having a virtual function returning that ID.

    For completeness, I’ll mention that Clang and LLVM have their own way of dealing with object identification without RTTI. You may want to read about their way of implementing isa, cast and dyn_cast here.

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