I see from this entry that virtual inheritance adds sizeof(pointer) to an object's memory footprint. Other than that, are there any drawbacks to me just using virtual inheritance by default, and conventional inheritance only when needed? It seems like it'd lead to more future-proof class design, but maybe I'm missing some pitfall.
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The drawbacks are that
Point 1 alone makes it not worth it, since you can't hide your virtual bases. There is almost always a better way. |
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In my experience, virtual inheritance (as opposed to virtual methods) is almost never needed. In C++ it's used to address the "diamond inheritance problem", which if you avoid multiple inheritance cannot actually happen. I'm pretty sure that I've never encountered virtual inheritance outside C++ books, which includes both code I write and million+ line systems I maintain. |
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