@ManofOneWay True. Too hard to get right. Guarantee it in your base class. Is the only 'hygienic' approach. It is the responsibility of the base class to allow polymorphic use
@ManofOneWay Also. No contradiction there. All you gain is that the base class destructor is implicitely made virtual when a derived class marks its dtor virtual. No difference there
@ManofOneWay all classes have a destructor. If you don't declare it yourself, it will implicitly be non-virtual. So you have to at least declare it, and if you declare it, you have to define it somewhere. Thus: in a abstract class, you must always define the destructor
@ManofOneWay so don't set it to zero, just have virtual ~PseudoInstruction() {}
Still pretty sure there's something else in play. Scrolling doesn't require the network. Look for failing hardware, IRQ conflicts (do you have something USB attached that you don't normallly have?)
You have to have template declarations in the same file as definitions, but do you have to have template specialisations in the same file as the declaration?
@ManofOneWay all classes must have a destructor defined. To have a class be abstract, a function other than the destructor must be pure virtual (because the destructor cannot be)
@MooingDuck If I try to create an instance of the existing class I get an error: ./main.c++:60:23: error: variable type 'PseudoInstruction' is an abstract class PseudoInstruction p(NULL,{}); ^ ./PseudoInstruction.h++:12:13: note: unimplemented pure virtual method '~PseudoInstruction' in 'PseudoInstruction' virtual ~PseudoInstruction() = 0; ^ 1 error generated.
@SethCarnegie Experience suggests this should be - mostly - everytime the header is included. Too hard to rule out ODR-usage of specializations in the face of SFINA, in my opinion
@MooingDuck It might not be weird. It might be a case of garbage-in-garbage-out. I think this leads to UB by definition, because the standard guarantees that the base class destructor is run /cc @ManofOneWay
I want to be able to "collect" all different instructions in an array for example, by using a base class. Still I don't it to be possible to create that base class
struct A { virtual ~A() = 0; };
struct B : A { ~B() {} };
int main() { B b; }
test.cpp:(.text._ZN1BD2Ev[_ZN1BD5Ev]+0x1f): undefined reference to `A::~A()'
I want this behavior, but are you saying it's wrong?
As I see it, I can make the dtor pure virtual in order to use both polymorphism (dealloc correctly, if I were to add more things in the classes) and make A abstract
I was browsing through the source of various setjmp and longjmp implementations and noticed that not all of the CPU registers are saved in the jmp_buf structure. After reviewing the AMD64 ABI, I noticed that only the callee-saved registers are saved.
I do not understand how the function state ca...
@ManofOneWay oh wait, I just reread what sehe said. If you want a cleaner design, make the "abstract" classes' destructor defined in the class (not pure virtual), and make the constructors all protected. Then it can only be created by a derived class. That's exactly what you want, and cleaner.
@sehe I have three files for a class: the .h (for declarations), the .template (for template function definitions), and the .cpp (for normal function definitions); if I put the template specialisations in the .template file, I get multiple definition linker errors, but if I put it in the .cpp, it compiles fine
So for me, it's not working unless I separate them
It worked to remove old g++ and install again. But after doing that it occurred to me that I could just have moved the old installation. That would have been much safer.
Anyway, re my question today, the code compiles fine with g++ 4.7
@ManofOneWay if the base class has no virtual members, then if you store the derived objects in a container, it will treat them as only the derived type. They might as well have not been derived at all.
@ManofOneWay the instructions should have some virtual members, or there's no reason to store them in a container
They're all exactly the same as far as the container can ever know.
So, put it this way: after they're in the container, what would you like to do with the derived objects? Those actions should all be virtual.