1

I'm using g++ 4.8.4.
A friend Friend of pure virtual class Derived cannot access Derived's private methods, unless the pure virtual function declared specifically.
Code:

class Friend;
class Base {
private:
    virtual void doSomething() = 0;
};

class Derived: public Base {
private:
    friend class Friend;
};

class Friend {
public:
    void doSomething() { derived->doSomething(); };
private:
    Derived* derived;
};

Compilation gives the following error:

error: ‘virtual void Base::doSomething()’ is private

What fixes the error is specifically declaring doSomething() for Derived:

class Derived: public Base {
private:
    virtual void doSomething() = 0;
    friend class Friend;
};

Why?
Should it act like that?

2
  • You gave Friend access to Derived and the compiler complains about you accessing Base. Seems pretty straightforward. Give Friend access to Base or restrict Friend to not use private parts of classes other than Derived and Friend.
    – nwp
    Mar 20, 2017 at 13:06
  • 1
    The method is private in Base. Derived cannot call it, and neither can its friends. However Derived still can override it. Mar 20, 2017 at 13:08

1 Answer 1

4

The problem is that doSomething is declared as private in Base. This means that not even a derived class can access it. Move it to protected and it should work:

class Base {
protected:
    virtual void doSomething() = 0;
};

Also, since Derived doesn't implement the function, it too, will be considered an abstract base class (you cannot make an instance).

1
  • Oh, I feel shame. Thanks!
    – hudac
    Mar 20, 2017 at 13:09

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