I have a base class called Item:

#ifndef ITEM_H
#define ITEM_H

#include <ostream>

class Item {
public:
    virtual ~Item() {}
    virtual void print(std::ostream& out) const {}
    friend std::ostream& operator << (std::ostream& out, Item& item){
    item.print(out);
    return out;
    }
};



#endif

and I have a derived class Tower:

#ifndef TOWER_H
#define TOWER_H

#include <iostream>
#include <iostream>
#include <exception>
#include "item.h"
#include "Card.h"

class Tower : public Item {
    unsigned height;
        void print(std::ostream& o) const;
public:
    Tower(const Card& card);
    int demolish(Card& card) const;
    unsigned getHeight() const;
};

#endif

Source code for Tower:

#include "tower.h"



Tower::Tower(const Card& card){
    height = card.getDis();
}

void Tower::print(std::ostream& o) const {
    o << height;
}


int Tower::demolish(Card& card) const{
    try {
    if(height != card.getDis()){
            throw std::exception ();
        } else {
            return height;
        }
    } catch (std::exception e){
        cout<< "Card's value not enough to demolish the tower." << endl;
    }
}

unsigned Tower::getHeight() const {
    return height;
}

Now I'm trying to test the code to see if the operator overloading works properly:

void test() {
    Card card (Card::SOUTH, 3);
    Tower tower(card);

    std::cout << "Printing tower: " << tower << std::endl;  //PRINTS OUT 3 AS EXPECTED

    Card one (Card::NORTH, 2);
    Card two (Card::WEST, 3);

    std::cout << "Expecting to receive an error: " <<endl;
    tower.demolish(one);

    std::cout << "Expecting to have the tower demolished: ";
    std::cout << tower.demolish(two) <<std::endl;

    std::cout << "Height of the tower: " << tower.getHeight() <<std::endl;

    std::vector<Item> items;       //creating an Item vector
    items.push_back(Tower(one));

    Item items2[1];                //creating an array of Items
    items[0]= tower;

    std::cout << "Printing out an Item: ";    
    std::cout << items.back()<<std::endl;   //EXPECTING TO GET 2 BUT IT PRINTS NOTHING, WHY IS THAT?
    std::cout << "OR: " << items2[0]<<std::endl;  //SAME ISSUE HERE, EXPECTING TO GET 3
}

As can be understood from the code, a Card holds an integer value distance and an enum value direction. It would've been a mess if i included that code too. I have commented my questions in the last piece of code test(). Thanks for your help in advance.

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1  
¤ Item items2[1] creates an array of one Item object. When you copy a Tower object there, all that's copied is the Item base class sub-object. That's called slicing. The copy is of the Item type. These bits (in your case zero number of bits but that does not matter) don't remember that they were copied from an object of a derived type, and in particular, for the way that almost every C++ implementation works, the vtable pointer in the object points to the Item class vtable. Cheers & hth., – Cheers and hth. - Alf Dec 4 '11 at 6:35
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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted
std::vector<Item> items;       //creating an Item vector
items.push_back(Tower(one));

What happens here is called "slicing". Since you're not storing pointers, but actual objects, the Tower part of the class is just cut off and only the Item part is pushed into the vector. To use virtual functions and polymorphism, you need a reference or pointer to the base class.

std::vector<Item*> items;       //creating an Item vector
items.push_back(new Tower(one));
// ...
// at the end of main:
for(int i=0; i < items.size(); ++i)
  delete items[i];

Or with smart pointers from Boost or a C++11 library

std::vector<shared_ptr<Item>> items;
items.push_back(make_shared<Tower>(one));
// nothing further needs to be done

For printing, you now obviously need to dereference the pointer:

std::cout << "Printing out an Item: ";    
std::cout << *items.back()<<std::endl;
std::cout << "OR: " << *items2[0]<<std::endl;

}

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Interesting, I didn't know that. Thanks very much @Xeo – Amino Acid Dec 4 '11 at 6:43
@Amino Acid: If this answer solved your problem, you should click the little tick right besides of it. :) – Xeo Dec 4 '11 at 9:51
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