Is there ever a good reason to not declare a virtual destructor for a class? When should you specifically avoid writing one?
|
There is no need to use a virtual destructor when any of the below is true:
No specific reason to avoid it unless you are really so pressed for memory. |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
To answer the question explicitly, ie. when should you not declare a virtual destructor. Adding a virtual destructor might change your class from being POD (Plain Old Data) In an extreme case, such a change can also cause undefined behaviour where the class is being used n a way that requires a POD, eg. passing it via an ellipsis parameter, or using it with memcpy.
|
|||||
|
|
I declare a virtual destructor if and only if I have virtual methods. Once I have virtual methods, I don't trust myself to avoid instantiating it on the heap or storing a pointer to the base class. Both of these are extremely common operations and will often leak resources silently if the destructor is not declared virtual. |
|||||||||||
|
|
A virtual destructor is needed whenever there is any chance that
If your code is not performance critical, it would be reasonable to add a virtual destructor to every base class you write, just for safety. However, if you found yourself |
|||
|
|
|
Virtual functions mean every allocated object increases in memory cost by a virtual function table pointer. So if your program involves allocating a very large number of some object, it would be worth avoiding all virtual functions in order to save the additional 32 bits per object. In all other cases, you will save yourself debug misery to make the dtor virtual. |
|||
|
|
|
I usually declare the destructor virtual, but if you have performance critical code that is used in an inner loop, you might want to avoid the virtual table lookup. That can be important in some cases, like collision checking. But be careful about how you destroy those objects if you use inheritance, or you will destroy only half of the object. Note that the virtual table lookup happens for an object if any method on that object is virtual. So no point in removing the virtual specification on a destructor if you have other virtual methods in the class. |
|||
|
|
|
Not all C++ classes are suitable for use as a base class with dynamic polymorphism. If you want your class to be suitable for dynamic polymorphism, then its destructor must be virtual. In addition, any methods which a subclass could conceivably want to override (which might mean all public methods, plus potentially some protected ones used internally) must be virtual. If your class is not suitable for dynamic polymorphism, then the destructor should not be marked virtual, because to do so is misleading. It just encourages people to use your class incorrectly. Here's an example of a class which would not be suitable for dynamic polymorphism, even if its destructor were virtual:
The whole point of this class is to sit on the stack for RAII. If you're passing around pointers to objects of this class, let alone subclasses of it, then you're Doing It Wrong. |
|||||||||
|
|
If you have a very small class with a huge number of instances, the overhead of a vtable pointer can make a difference in your program's memory usage. As long as your class doesn't have any other virtual methods, making the destructor non-virtual will save that overhead. |
|||
|
|
|
If you absolutely positively must ensure that your class does not have a vtable then you must not have a virtual destructor as well. This is a rare case, but it does happen. The most familiar example of a pattern that does this are the DirectX D3DVECTOR and D3DMATRIX classes. These are class methods instead of functions for the syntactic sugar, but the classes intentionally do not have a vtable in order to avoid the function overhead because these classes are specifically used in the inner loop of many high-performance applications. |
|||
|
|
|
On operation that will be performed on the base class, and that should behave virtually, should be virtual. If deletion can be performed polymorphically through the base class interface, then it must behave virtually and be virtual. The destructor has no need to be virtual if you don't intend to derive from the class. And even if you do, a protected non-virtual destructor is just as good if deletion of base class pointers isn't required. |
|||
|
|
|
The performance answer is the only one I know of which stands a chance of being true. If you've measured and found that de-virtualizing your destructors really speeds things up, then you've probably got other things in that class that need speeding up too, but at this point there are more important considerations. Some day someone is going to discover that your code would provide a nice base class for them and save them a week's work. You'd better make sure they do that week's work, copying and pasting your code, instead of using your code as a base. You'd better make sure you make some of your important methods private so that no one can ever inherit from you. |
|||||||
|