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Possible Duplicate:
How do you declare an interface in C++?
Interface as in java in c++?

I am a Java programmer learning C++, and I was wondering if there is something like Java interfaces in C++, i.e. classes that another class can implement/extend more than one of. Thanks. p.s. New here so tell me if I did anything wrong.

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    C++ supports full multiple inheritance, so there's no distinction between classes and interfaces like in Java. If you make a class with all pure virtual methods then it's the equivalent of a Java interface.
    – DaoWen
    Aug 14, 2012 at 4:57
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    An abstract class with only pure virtual member functions.
    – obataku
    Aug 14, 2012 at 4:57
  • Also consider the VC++'s '__interface' keyword. check MSDN. Aug 14, 2012 at 4:58
  • This question stackoverflow.com/questions/6831161/interface-as-in-java-in-c is even more exact a duplicate (but has itself been closed as duplicate of the one I linked above).
    – jogojapan
    Aug 14, 2012 at 5:24
  • @DaoWen "If you make a class with all pure virtual methods then it's the equivalent of a Java interface." almost. See my answer.
    – curiousguy
    Aug 14, 2012 at 6:09

2 Answers 2

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In C++ a class containing only pure virtual methods denotes an interface.

Example:

// Define the Serializable interface.
class Serializable {
     // virtual destructor is required if the object may
     // be deleted through a pointer to Serializable
    virtual ~Serializable() {}

    virtual std::string serialize() const = 0;
};

// Implements the Serializable interface
class MyClass : public MyBaseClass, public virtual Serializable {
    virtual std::string serialize() const { 
        // Implementation goes here.
    }
};
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    You need virtual inheritance to emulate Java interface implementation. FTFY. Aug 14, 2012 at 5:30
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    -1, it's abstract class, not interface. You can't own object via it's interface, i.e. interface can't have public destructor. (unless it's the IDestructible interface).
    – Abyx
    Aug 14, 2012 at 8:51
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    @Abyx Is that Java specific? In C++ you can delete an object through a pointer to an interface just fine (if it's destructor is declared virtual). Whether or not that's appropriate depends on the application. If it was not appropriate then making the destructor protected would enforce the rule. Aug 15, 2012 at 3:02
  • @Abyx "interface can't have public destructor" Source? What is the official definition for C++?
    – curiousguy
    Aug 16, 2012 at 17:22
  • @Abyx, "i.e. interface can't have public destructor.", Bjarne Stroustrup disagrees with you: "public virtual destructors is a tried and true technique".
    – Gill Bates
    Aug 26, 2019 at 15:23
-5

To emulate Java interface, you can use an ordinary base with only pure virtual functions.

You need to use virtual inheritance, otherwise you could get repeated inheritance: the same class can be a base class more than once in C++. This means that access of this base class would be ambiguous in this case.

C++ does not provide the exact equivalent of Java interface: in C++, overriding a virtual function can only be done in a derived class of the class with the virtual function declaration, whereas in Java, the overrider for a method in an interface can be declared in a base class.

[EXAMPLE:

struct B1 {
    void foo ();
};

struct B2 {
    virtual void foo () = 0;
};

struct D : B1, B2 {
    // no declaration of foo() here
};

D inherits too function declarations: B1::foo() and B2::foo().

B2::foo() is pure virtual, so D::B2::foo() is too; B1::foo() doesn't override B2::foo() because B2 isn't a derived class of B1.

Thus, D is an abstract class.

--end example]

Anyway, why would you emulate the arbitrary limits of Java in C++?

EDIT: added example for clarification.

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  • I usually try to avoid multiple inheritance in C++, so I've never come across virtual inheritance before. Thanks for the clarification!
    – DaoWen
    Aug 14, 2012 at 9:26
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    @DaoWen: please be advised, this answer is technically INCORRECT, and the poster has refused to fix it. Aug 14, 2012 at 10:30
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    @Cheers and hth. - Alf: could you please elaborate on why it's incorrect?
    – DaoWen
    Aug 14, 2012 at 10:32
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    @DaoWen: The third paragraph has at least two interpretations, but both of them incorrect. In C++ you can inherit in an implementation of an interface, Java-style. That's what virtual inheritance is about in this context. The part that "curious guy" mentions in 2nd para is just indirectly relevant: it's part of the basis the allows the Java-like implementation inheritance, but it does not enable it. Aug 14, 2012 at 10:39
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    The notion of 'interfaces' in Java is not a 'limit'. It is a nice way of guaranteeing that a class can do X in situations where you can not provide a generic X function as the implementation depends too much on how a class works.
    – thecoshman
    Aug 14, 2012 at 10:52

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