Given the following example, why do I have to explicitly use the statement b->A::DoSomething() rather than just b->DoSomething()? Shouldn't the compiler's overload resolution figure out which method I'm talking about? I'm using Microsoft VS 2005. (Note: using virtual doesn't help in this case)
class A
{
public:
int DoSomething() {return 0;};
};
class B : public A
{
public:
int DoSomething(int x) {return 1;};
};
int main()
{
B* b = new B();
b->A::DoSomething(); //why this?
//b->DoSomething(); //why not this? (gives compiler error)
delete b;
return 0;
}
