I have a base class with some members and a derived class. I want some members of the base class to be used in the derived class; and I want some as a mandatory member for the derived class (the base class just declares it and the derived class defines it). I know how to do the first part (: public C). But I don't know how to do the other part.
Assuming the "part" you want the derived class to define is a member function, you define that member function as pure virtual in the base class.
class base { public: virtual void pv() = 0; };
class derived : public base { public: virtual void pv() { /* whatever */ } };
While it's possible to derive a class from base that doesn't override pv, you can't create an instance of that class--you have to create some further-derived class that does override it before you can create an instance.
@JerryCoffin turned out that this is also a problem. I NEED to use the base instance (it represents a general type (of it's derived classes)); but get error with derived classes that do not implement the required members.
Hmm. When I said "only put int value; in your base class" I meant "remove int value from your derived classes", not "remove void action1(); from your base class".
Also the base class needs to change to virtual void action1(); if you want to be able to call derived functions through the base.
Though maybe instead of removing the int value = 3; you need to add Type_15() { value = 3; }.
And also it needs to be class Type_15 : public Type_1X { ... };.
@Milad That's what we're currently building. Though I'm not a fan of this type of inheritance shenanigans. It makes working with your classes difficult and inefficient.
@Milad It depends on the rest of the code. One solution is to not inherit from anything and use templates that assume that T::value and T::action1 exist and are of the right type.
Another solution is type erasure, but we probably don't want to go there.
Another solution is to merge all the classes into 1 class.
@nwp those can indeed work. I currently have a code that works. I just wanted to redesign it. My design is better than the alternatives. But haven't been able to do it in C++. In PHP, interface is used to do that.
If someone passes in something that is not a Type_1X you get a somewhat unintelligible error message complaining about Sometype doesn't have a member value which is not very helpful. You can improve that with static_asserts that can test the given type and give a user defined error message like "Given type does not match interface Type_1X because it doesn't have an accessible .value member of type int" or similar.
Templates don't look good for my good either. There is another way. That also looks ugly. Just define the members of the base class with garbage. e.g., if it's a function that returns a value, just define a function that returns a dummy value (it won't be called and it will compile without error.
@nwp do you think that C++ not having something similar to PHP interface is a language issue? Or do you think it's not even possible (considering the way C++ compiles and optimizes?)
Templates are the C++-equivalent to PHP interfaces. C++ could certainly have used better syntax. C++20 added concepts which improved on that front and are very close to interfaces.
If you look at the Hashable concept example it should be basically what you want.
I haven't used them yet though and it looks like MSVC only has partial support for them. If you use gcc 10 or clang 10 you can use them now.
"No requires expression support". As far as I can see you don't need that here, so you should be good.
Oh wait, I think you do. It starts with requires. Oops.
Well "should", as in, people wouldn't expect it to. And while I quite enjoy a good surprise occasionally. "Suprising" is usually not a good attribute for code.
I don't really know if the premise of "I need the derived classes to have a certain data member" is a great idea in C++. Why not just use a virtual getter function if it NEEDS to be OOP?
@nwp I'm afraid it's complicated. But to make it short, each class is an instruction (like CPU instruction) that can be executed. e.g., class EQUALITY which tests to see if a given value is equal it's value, EMPTY (tests emptiness), etc.
it's honestly better to make your own jump-table like thingy. And if you absolutely need have some intermediate representation use something like a tagged union or so, where you don't need to rely on RTTI