I have an existing piece of code like this:
struct Base {
Base() = default;
};
struct Derive: public Base
{
Derive() = default;
Derive(const Derive&) = delete;
Derive(Derive&& p) { *this = std::move(p); }
Derive& operator = (const Derive& p) = delete;
Derive& operator = (Derive&& p) {
return *this;
}
};
int main() {
Derive p;
}
It compiles and works. Now I want to change class definition a little bit so that Base or Derived class is always constructed with certain integer parameter and never constructed without such param.
So if I try the following changes:
struct Base {
Base() = delete;
Base(int a_) : a{a_} {};
private:
int a; //new mandatory param;
};
struct Derive: public Base
{
Derive() = delete;
Derive(int a_) : Base(a_) {};
Derive(const Derive&) = delete;
Derive(Derive&& p) { *this = std::move(p); }
Derive& operator = (const Derive& p) = delete;
Derive& operator = (Derive&& p) {
return *this;
}
};
int main() {
Derive p{1};
}
I get the compilation error
main.cpp:15:2: error: call to deleted constructor of 'Base'
Derive(Derive&& p) { *this = std::move(p); }
^
main.cpp:4:2: note: 'Base' has been explicitly marked deleted here
Base() = delete;
^
1 error generated.
Apparently this way doesn't work. So how do I modify the code so it compiles and no param constructor is never called without error?