Questions tagged [virtual-destructor]

A virtual destructor ensures a C++ object will correctly call the destructor of the most-derived class when a polymorphic object is deleted through a pointer to its base class.

virtual-destructor
Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
4 votes
0 answers
139 views

Need of explicit copy constructor if virtual destructor defined

After update, my Visual Studio compiler started producing "warning C5267: definition of implicit assignment operator for 'Value' is deprecated because it has a user-provided destructor" with ...
Jarek C's user avatar
  • 1,157
1 vote
1 answer
98 views

Vector of polymorphic objects and unique_ptr

I am trying to do an assignment and decided to properly manage memory this time but ended up with more questions than answers. I want to have a vector of children of a parent class for example vector&...
Different's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
83 views

Why does virtual destructor cause segmentaion fault when dealing with user-defined MPI types?

I'm using the example provided with Boost.MPI documentation found here. I have a bit modified these two classes and as soon as I add destructor to this class, I will get segmentation fault during ...
MA19's user avatar
  • 540
1 vote
2 answers
231 views

Why does dynamic_cast need the base class to have a virtual destructor? [duplicate]

I had the following code, on which I tried doing a dynamic_cast: struct Base { Base() {} ~Base() {} }; struct Derived: public Base { Derived() {} ~Derived() {} }; struct ...
Shishir Jessu's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
241 views

Resolving "undefined reference" on pure virtual destructor of base class [duplicate]

I am learning Object Oriented programming. Here is a simple code snippet that I have written: class Food { protected: int id; FoodTypes type; string name; public: Food(int id, ...
R Karandikar's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
70 views

I don't understand C++ Primer explanation about virtual destructor

I don't understand this phrase from the famous C++ Primer : "classes used as the root of an inheritance hierarchy almost always define a virtual destructor." I don't understand why the ...
Autechre's user avatar
  • 531
10 votes
1 answer
382 views

Problem with virtual destructor when using templated operator delete

The following class (with virtual destructor) contains a templated operator delete: struct S { virtual ~S() {} template <typename... Args> void operator delete(void* ptr, Args... ...
Blackteahamburger's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
85 views

C++ Memory Layout: Questions about multiple inheritance, virtual destructors, and virtual function tables

I have a main.cpp file as follows. #include <stdio.h> class Base1 { public: int ibase1; Base1() : ibase1(10) {} virtual void f_b1_1() { printf("Base1::f_b1_1()()\n"); } ...
xxllxx666's user avatar
  • 313
3 votes
3 answers
168 views

How is the size of a polymorphic object deduced in a delete operation?

I know that there are a lot of similar questions on SO related to what I am about to ask, I've read many of them and still feel a bit vague, so I decided to ask this question. Given the following code:...
CPPL's user avatar
  • 812
0 votes
1 answer
213 views

Destructor protected within this context c++ (issue #1) [duplicate]

I have a compilation error with C++11. I have defined a base class Node with protected ctor and dtor. I have defined an inherited class Directory with public inheritance. I am calling the dtor of the ...
infoasker's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
106 views

C++: Implementation of virtual destructor necessary when using inherited structs with only properties?

I know that I need to define a virtual destructor (best option even if my class is final). In my case, I am using C-like structures (no functions, no defaults, just plain members) and use inheritance ...
moerker's user avatar
  • 97
1 vote
1 answer
210 views

A misunderstanding with polymorphism and virtual destructors

Example: class Base { public: virtual void f() = 0; virtual ~Base() { std::cout << "Base::~Base()\n"; } }; class Derived : public Base { public: void f() { } ~...
AJ Tan's user avatar
  • 193
2 votes
1 answer
218 views

Is the destructor of a derived class virtual by-default if the base class destructor is virtual?

I was recently reading about virtual functions and virtual destructors, and the following question aroused. For instance, I have the following inheritance chain. class Base { public: virtual ~Base(...
Karen Baghdasaryan's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
237 views

Intel C++ compiler and Wnon-virtual-dtor flag gives (wrong?) warning

I was trying to compile some code of mine which, in g++ (with the --Wnon-virtual-dtor Flag) compiled just fine. Also, my IDE and clang-tidy didn't warn me (I see that this might be false of course). ...
Flusslauf's user avatar
  • 102
3 votes
1 answer
127 views

Why does a virtual destructor write to memory?

Recently, when working with custom allocator code and placement new+delete, I noticed something that surprised me: When a virtual destructor is called, it writes to the object's soon-to-be-freed ...
jwd's user avatar
  • 11k
1 vote
1 answer
132 views

C++: Can the destructor be the only virtual function in a class?

I read that the destructor should be declared virtual only if there is virtual function in a class. Is this a requirement or is it possible to do otherwise?
pasha's user avatar
  • 2,055
1 vote
1 answer
60 views

Deriving from an abstract base with a user-declared dtor and move-support

A user-declared dtor prevents the autogeneration of the move-ctor/-assignment-operator, but will the autogeneration only be prevented in the class where the dtor has been defined or will the ...
SoulfreezerXP's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
508 views

deleted function 'virtual Classname::~Classname()' overriding non-deleted function VIRTUAL DESTRUCTOR

I am trying to find the problem in this code, it does not compile in C++14. The original problem was to make this compile 'without editing Object or modifying drawObject()'s prototype': #include <...
Bourhano's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
110 views

Inheritance in c++ : destructors

I added a protected member array in the abstract base class that each derived class uses, should the destructor of the base class be virtual or can I do: **~base(){ delete[] array; }**
CS2000's user avatar
  • 51
0 votes
1 answer
293 views

segmentation fault with large number of shared_ptr

this I is my .h file: class Node { public: static void disp(const std::vector<int> &v); static size_t Node_no; Node(const std::vector<int> &...
SeAlGhz's user avatar
  • 75
0 votes
1 answer
133 views

Virtual destructor, what would happen I didnt have a destructor in the derived class?

I've just had my lesson about virtual destructors and I have a question. Lets say we have this code below: #include <iostream> class Base { public: virtual void fun() { std::cout << &...
Proxified's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
636 views

deleting object through pointer to base without virtual destructor

I have the code: class A1 { public: A1() { cout << "A1"; } virtual ~A1() { cout << "~A1"; } }; class A2 { public: A2() { cout << "A2"; } ...
akolechko's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
52 views

Inline destructor "causes" bad_alloc [duplicate]

I have encountered a strange bug in my program which was solved by making a destructor non-inline: File a.h class A { ... inline virtual ~A(){} }; File b.h class B : public A { ... ...
K-J's user avatar
  • 558
1 vote
1 answer
113 views

Is there any advantage if virtual destructor is not defined with shared_ptr

When we use shared_ptr with polymorphic classes we don't need virtual destructors due to type erased deleter. But does it makes sense to define a destructor in simple cases. What can be the advantages ...
Daemon's user avatar
  • 1,625
2 votes
2 answers
951 views

Using enable_shared_from_this in polymorphic inheritance with virtual destructor

I have the following class structure for Managing callbacks with different prototypes: class MethodHandlerBase: public std::enable_shared_from_this<MethodHandlerBase>{ public: virtual void ...
lal12's user avatar
  • 131
2 votes
1 answer
251 views

std::enable_shared_from_this, non-virtual destructor and public inheritance

The std::enable_shared_from_this class is a (template) mixin, recommended for use to enable creating shared pointers from a given object (or its address), which all have common ownership of the object....
einpoklum's user avatar
  • 124k
0 votes
1 answer
134 views

C++ primer 5 ed. Virtual destructor and move semantics

In C++ primer 5 ed. it is said: "The fact that a base class needs a virtual destructor has an important indirect impact on the definition of base and derived classes: If a class defines a ...
Maestro's user avatar
  • 2,512
2 votes
2 answers
471 views

How to derive from a class without virtual-destructor?

There is a virtual class as a callback interface, that I can neither modify, nor ask the author to fix. The only members of the class are a lot of virtual methods that can be overridden, so as to let ...
Leon's user avatar
  • 1,841
0 votes
0 answers
54 views

How can a destructor be both virtual and inline in C++? [duplicate]

The general good practice is that trivial constructors, destructors, get/set functions, etc, can be directly defined inside a class definition in a header file, rather than providing their bodies in a ...
softwarelover's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
96 views

C++: What is the order of destructor call with methods?

I got this code: Edit: The full code: #include <iostream> using namespace std; class A { public: A() {} A(const A& a) { cout << "A copy ctor" << ...
Idan Musayev's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
431 views

Base class virtual destructor - rule of five?

I have a base State interface class with virtual default destructor. class State { public: virtual void event() = 0; virtual ~State() = default; // relevant part virtual void onCreate() ...
weno's user avatar
  • 826
2 votes
2 answers
518 views

How to prevent an object from being deleted via a pointer to its parent type?

struct A {}; struct B : A { operator A() const = delete; // not work }; int main() { B* p_derived = new B(); delete p_derived; // ok // How to make the following two lines illegal? ...
xmllmx's user avatar
  • 40.8k
0 votes
0 answers
48 views

Why the inheritance of a class with non-virtual destructor is not a good thing even if the derived class adds no members?

In this answer answer: In particular, you are not allowed to delete a std::vector<T>* that actually points at a derived object (even if the derived class adds no members), yet the ...
StackExchange123's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
62 views

How can be that a destructor is called but no constuctor before that?

I am currently learning the object oriented feature of c++. I wrote a piece of code to test how inheritance and polymorphism works. Here is a part of the code: class Person { public: ...
Julius_Evola's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
178 views

C++ inheritance and valgrind memory leak

I was checking my codes with valgrind and it found a memory leak. I didn't understand why it happened. Instead of putting my main code, I made a similar program to check whether my other allocations(...
fbgencer's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
305 views

How can I aggregate init a struct that inherits from a virtual type?

As per [dcl.init.aggr] I cannot aggregate init a type, if it has (among other things) virtual functions, which includes inheriting from a type with a virtual destructor. However, I'd like to avoid ...
bitmask's user avatar
  • 33.4k
2 votes
1 answer
376 views

Why does the deleting destructor occupy a second vtable slot besides the ordinary destructor?

In C++ ABI implementations modeled after the Itanium C++ ABI, which is followed by many ABIs for other processors, virtual destructors actually occupy two vtable slots. Besides the "complete object ...
sh-'s user avatar
  • 1,001
0 votes
5 answers
873 views

Overload -> arrow operator in shared_ptr<interface> instance with no pure virtual destructor in interface

I'm trying to overload the -> operator to eventually execute something along the lines: MyInterface *myInstance = (MyInterface *)(new A()); myInstance->Toggle(); //this works wonderfully std::...
StefanS's user avatar
  • 1,099
2 votes
1 answer
152 views

Defaulted destructor in base class disable move constructor in child class if there is a member

Why does defaulted (user declared) destructor in Base1 prevent generation of move constructor/operator in Child1 class, but everything work fine when I move member data from Base (Base2) to Child (...
NiegodziwyBeru's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
469 views

Order of calling virtual destructors in C++

Well so i have been trying to understand OOP concepts through C++ , however i am not able to get some parts of virtual destructors. I have written a small snippet : class A{ int x; public: ...
TheSYNcoder's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
583 views

correct usage of std::vector in dll interfaces (class with virtual destructor!)

I will try to explain my issue with an example. I have the following class: __declspec(dllexport) class myclass { public: int a; int b; myclass() {}; virtual ~myclass() {}; // ~...
Marco Randazzo's user avatar
7 votes
2 answers
405 views

Does the standard allow an implicit virtual destructor not being implicitly defined when no instances of its class are created?

While thinking about this question, I stumbled upon something else I don't understand. Standard says... [class.dtor]/4 If a class has no user-declared destructor, a destructor is ...
Mark's user avatar
  • 1,046
4 votes
3 answers
2k views

How to properly implement a C++ class destructor

In a class (without direct pointer members), I see there are following 3 possibilities for defining a destructor. class Child : public Parent { public: // ~Child() override {} // (1) ...
Anubis's user avatar
  • 7,215
5 votes
7 answers
3k views

virtual destructor for pure abstract class [duplicate]

Based on what I found here and on other links on stackoverflow, we should always define a virtual destructor in the base class if we plan to use it polymorphically. I want to know if there is an ...
DDG's user avatar
  • 169
3 votes
1 answer
464 views

Why does a virtual destructor require operator delete?

Consider the following code: class Base { public: #ifdef __VIRTUAL__ virtual ~Base() {} #else ~Base() {} #endif }; class Derived : public Base { public: ~Derived() {} private: static ...
libgcc's user avatar
  • 163
0 votes
0 answers
65 views

Practicality of virtual destructor in Base Class [duplicate]

Lets take this example: /* Source.cpp */ struct Base { virtual void func() = 0; }; struct Derived : public Base { virtual void func() override { } }; int ...
Phil-ZXX's user avatar
  • 2,559
1 vote
0 answers
996 views

If I have defined a virtual destructor in the class declaration, what code is required in the implementation (.cpp) file?

I have been provided with a header file that includes a base class declaration. Within the class declaration is a virtual destructor that has been defined. From this, we need to code the ...
Jacob717's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
66 views

How to get virtual destructors to be called in C++?

I am trying to see the effects of calling virtual destructors of classes belonging to a long chain of hierarchy: class A to class E. Strangely, the destructors do not write anything to the console. I ...
softwarelover's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
104 views

Can a base destructor really be overridden by a derived destructor in C++?

All over the web, as well as in Bjarne Stroustrup's C++ book, I see statements like, "If a base destructor is declared virtual then it is overridden by a derived class's destructor." But, why is it ...
softwarelover's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
552 views

Virtual destructor for pure abstract base classes

I have seen here and here that a good rule of thumb is to use virtual destructors for every class that is intended as a base class. I have a pure abstract base class (only contains pure virtual ...
Adam Sperry's user avatar

1
2 3 4 5