One problem with this is that if you forget to (re-)define super for derived classes, then any call to super::something will compile fine but will probably not call the desired function.
For example:
class Base
{
public: virtual void foo() { ... }
};
class Derived: public Base
{
public:
typedef Base super;
virtual void foo()
{
super::foo(); // call superclass implementation
// do other stuff
...
}
};
class DerivedAgain: public Derived
{
public:
virtual void foo()
{
// Call superclass function
super::foo(); // oops, calls Base::foo() rather than Derived::foo()
...
}
};
(As pointed out by Martin York in the comments to this answer, this problem can be eliminated by making the typedef private rather than public or protected.)
