I tried this code:
class A
{
virtual void foo() = 0;
};
class B
{
virtual void foo() = 0;
};
class C : public A, public B
{
//virtual void A::foo(){}
//virtual void B::foo(){}
virtual void A::foo();
virtual void B::foo();
};
void C::A::foo(){}
void C::B::foo(){}
int main()
{
C c;
return 0;
}
It is OK when using the commented part, but when I try to write the definitions outside the class declaration, the compiler reports errors. I am using the MSVC11 compiler, does anyone know how to write this? I need to move the code into the cpp file.
Thank you~~
A function overrides a virtual function of a base class based on the name and parameter types (see below). Therefore, your class C has two virtual functions foo, one inherited from each A and B. But a function void C::foo() overrides both:
[class.virtual]/2
If a virtual member function
vfis declared in a classBaseand in a classDerived, derived directly or indirectly fromBase, a member functionvfwith the same name, parameter-type-list, cv-qualification, and ref-qualifier (or absence of same) asBase::vfis declared, thenDerived::vfis also virtual (whether or not it is so declared) and it overridesBase::vf.
As I already stated in the comments, [dcl.meaning]/1 forbids the use of a qualified-id in the declaration of a (member) function:
When the declarator-id is qualified, the declaration shall refer to a previously declared member of the class or namespace to which the qualifier refers [...]"
Therefore any virtual void X::foo(); is illegal as a declaration inside C.
The code
class C : public A, public B
{
virtual void foo();
};
is the only way AFAIK to override foo, and it will override both A::foo and B::foo. There is no way to have two different overrides for A::foo and B::foo with different behaviour other than by introducing another layer of inheritance:
#include <iostream>
struct A
{
virtual void foo() = 0;
};
struct B
{
virtual void foo() = 0;
};
struct CA : A
{
virtual void foo() { std::cout << "A" << std::endl; }
};
struct CB : B
{
virtual void foo() { std::cout << "B" << std::endl; }
};
struct C : CA, CB {};
int main() {
C c;
//c.foo(); // ambiguous
A& a = c;
a.foo();
B& b = c;
b.foo();
}
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