3

I've been asking myself if it's possible to create a base class which has operator-overloads which the child-class(es) could use.

Example (with Template):

#include <cassert>

template<typename T>
struct Base {
    T value {};
    Base& operator=(const T& newVal) { this->value = newVal; return *this; }
};

template<typename T>
struct Child : Base<T> {
};

int main() {
    Child<int> ch {};
    assert(ch.value == 0);
    ch = 10;  // compilation error here
    assert(ch.value == 10);
}

I tried it myself with a Compile-Error. What should I do if I want to do that? Is this even possible or do I have to use virtual and override it (or whatever is possible)?

Error C2679: binary 'operator' : no operator found which takes a right-hand operand of type 'type' (or there is no acceptable conversion)

Compiler: MS Visual C++ 2015

PS: Please tell me if the solution makes the code ugly or not.

1
  • 2
    It's usually a good idea to include the exact compiler error you get. Also include the compiler name and version. Apr 17, 2016 at 14:20

1 Answer 1

11

Every class declares an operator=. If you don't do it explicitly, the operator is declared implicitly. That (possibly implicit) declaration hides the base member. To unhide it, you need to use a using declaration:

template <typename T>
struct Child : Base<T>
{
    using Base<T>::operator=;
};
1

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