I want to create an abstract class that has a pure virtual function that is called by the constructor that is NOT purely virtual. Below is my file class.hpp
:
#ifndef __CLASS_HPP__
#define __CLASS_HPP__
#include <iostream>
class Parent {
public:
Parent(){
helloWorld(); // forced to say hello when constructor called
};
virtual void helloWorld() = 0; // no standard hello...
};
class Child : public Parent {
public:
void helloWorld(){ // childs implementation of helloWorld
std::cout << "Hello, World!\n";
};
};
#endif
In this example, I have a parent class that has a pure virtual function helloWorld()
. I want every derived class to say "hello" when the constructor is called; hence why helloWorld()
is in the parent class constructor. However, I want every derived class to be FORCED to choose how its going go say "hello", rather than having a default method. Is this possible? If I try to compile this with g++, I get the error that a pure virtual function is being called by the constructor. My main.cpp
is:
#include "class.hpp"
int main(){
Child c;
return 0;
}
I am compiling using g++ main.cpp -o main.out
and the resulting error is:
In file included from main.cpp:1:0:
class.hpp: In constructor ‘Parent::Parent()’:
class.hpp:9:16: warning: pure virtual ‘virtual void Parent::helloWorld()’ called from constructor [enabled by default]
Any suggestions for how to get a similar setup in a legal way?
NEW QUESTION
DyP has brought to my attention that a constructor does not use any overridden functions, so what I want to be able to do isn't possible in the way I have it setup. However, I still would like to force any derived constructor to call the function helloWorld()
, is there any way to do this?
Parent::helloWorld
, which is pure, hence the warning (a pure virtual function can still have an implementation). You could pass a string from the derived class to the base class ctor via a parameter, and do the output in the base class. Also possible: 2-stage init.__CLASS_HPP__
) and names that begin with an underscore followed by a capital letter are reserved to the implementation. Don't use them.