The union keyword declares an aggregate type, similar to a struct, but the union object can store only one member at a time. The storage for all members overlaps. A union can have member functions (including constructors and destructors) but not virtual member functions. A union cannot be or have a base class. Union members cannot be static or references. Data members cannot have constructors, a destructor, copy-assignment operators, virtual functions, or virtual base classes. An initializer for a union can initialize only its first member. See class for the syntax rules. Exampleenum kind { integer, real, text }; struct data { kind data_kind; data(int i) : data_kind(integer), integerval(i) {} data(double d) : data_kind(real), realval(d) {} union { int integerval; double realval; }; }; See Alsoclass, struct, Chapter 2, Chapter 6 |