@ratchetfreak I have to be more specific: I think it makes no sense to have a non-virtual protected destructor for a base class with a virtual function (especially if the latter is public)
@Wolf It makes some amount of sense. If you have a non-virtual destructor then delete base_pointer; will do the wrong thing. Making the non-virtual destructor protected means that error cannot happen, so you are forced to do delete derived_ptr; which does the right thing.
@ratchetfreak, @nwp I remember that I changed code to fix a problem caused by non-virtual protected destructors in base classes with virtual functions, if I recall that right, it was due to calls through base pointers from the implementation of (intermediate) inheriting class.
to add: I think it's possible to call a protected base destructor from an implementing class
@nwp This will be hard. Is there a value in favouring a non-virtual protected destructor over a virtual protected one if the class has at least one "useful" (abstract) virtual function?
Not sure. Forcing you to keep derived pointers around has some value and it might be more efficient since you never need to do a virtual function call for destruction (especially if Derived is final). I don't use inheritance that way enough to know.
I build a demo within Code::Blocks but it really doesn't compile. Maybe I'm mixing things, maybe the compiler I used was broken in this respect. If it doesn't compile then the rule makes sense, if it does this would be a problem. I have to do further research here... (It's actually a C++98 compiler that I used)
(correction: I already built a demo that is not helpful for demonstration purposes)
@nwp just an idea: having a non-virtual protected destructor (that is forbidden - and ensured - to be not called polymorphically) would keep some VTBL(s) shorter.
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meta-question: would this tag wiki edit make sense to you?
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@wilx do you see a value in having a non-virtual protected destructor in a base class that has virtual functions (maybe abstract) , this is a suggested case in C.35 of in C++ Core Guidelines
@Wolf We have a bit of fear that this room will have more people asking than we can answer. 2-3 people at a time with tens of hours of nothing in between is manageable. Having the thousands of SO users come here would probably kill the room. On the other hand I have never read the tag wiki, so I don't think many other people would either.
I think it changed over time. Originally the lounge answered questions, but eventually people got annoyed by it so it was disallowed. It might make sense to remove the lounge from the tag wiki.
If I have a template class, member functions are not instantiated unless they are used. Does anyone know exactly what things inside a template class follow that same rule? Is it just for member functions, or what about friend or static functions? What about static constexpr data members?
@nwp Basically, this has to compile if it was just the someFunction() on the MyClass type. However, if it doesn't work for friend or static functions, it doesn't have to compile due to the operator<