0

The following has the error

error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol "public: virtual void __thiscall C::Foo(void)" (?Foo@C@@UAEXXZ)

so basically C::Test() cannot inherit implementation of B::Test() automatically and we have to explicitly write it everytime in C++?

class A
{

public:  
    virtual void Foo()=0;
    virtual void Test()=0;

};

class B: public A 
{
public: 
    virtual void Foo();
    virtual void Test()=0;

};

void B::Foo()
{

}



class C: public B
{
public:
    void Foo();
    void Test();
};



void C::Test()
{
}
1
  • At least one derived class must implement a pure virtual function declared in a base class. May 21, 2013 at 18:49

3 Answers 3

4

If your derived class declares a virtual method from a parent class, as C does with void Foo(), then it must implement it too. If you want to inherit B's implementation, then don't declare void Foo() in C.

class C: public B
{
public:
    void Test();
};
1
  • Also you should have the virtual tag on void Test(), and (as a personal preference) I always use the override keyword when overriding a virtual function. Neither of these are required to get your code to run, but they do make it more obvious what you are doing and forces additional compiler checks.
    – IdeaHat
    May 21, 2013 at 18:57
0

You have made A::Test() pure virtual, so the child class must implement it.

That is what the A::Test()=0 syntax means.

If you remove =0, and provide an implementation in the parent class, you are not required to implement it in the child classes.

0

You only need a pure virtual function in your abstract base class, for dynamic binding.

Edit: I'm pretty sure you need to implement the all of the functions, even if they're empty. That's why it wouldn't compile for you.

class A
{
    public:  
    virtual void Foo()=0;
    virtual void Test()=0;
};

class B: public A
{
    public: 
    void Foo();
    void Test();
};

void B::Foo()
{

}
void B::Test()
{

}


class C: public B
{
    public:
    void Foo();
    void Test();
};


void C::Foo()
{

}
void C::Test()
{
}
1
  • I tested it on my linux, and I had to implement all the functions for it to compile successfully.
    – Zera42
    May 21, 2013 at 20:02

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