There is mechanism built in C++ programming to access private or protected data from non-member function which is friend function and friend class.
A friend function of a class is defined outside that class' scope but it has the right to access all private and protected members of the class. Even though the prototypes for friend functions appear in the class definition, friends are not member functions.To declare a function as a friend of a class, precede the function prototype in the class definition with keyword friend as follows:
class Box
{
double width;
public:
double length;
friend void printWidth( Box box ); // friend function
void setWidth( double wid );
};
and to declare all member functions of class ClassTwo as friends of class ClassOne, place a following declaration in the definition of class ClassOne:
friend class ClassTwo;
See this program using friend function in c++
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
class Box
{
double width;
public:
friend void printWidth( Box box );
void setWidth( double wid );
};
// Member function definition
void Box::setWidth( double wid )
{
width = wid;
}
// Note: printWidth() is not a member function of any class.
void printWidth( Box box )
{
/* Because printWidth() is a friend of Box, it can
directly access any member of this class */
cout << "Width of box : " << box.width <<endl;
}
// Main function for the program
int main( )
{
Box box;
// set box width without member function
box.setWidth(10.0);
// Use friend function to print the wdith.
printWidth( box );
return 0;
}
credits to: http://www.tutorialspoint.com/cplusplus/cpp_friend_functions.htm