Feb 7, 2017 11:44
@MK I said it only worked for one level because subclasses of Derived are allowed to reimplement foo_impl(). However, if one uses the final keyword to mark the function as non-virtual, and then adds another virtual function for subclasses to implement, this would effectively continue the template pattern indefinitely.
Feb 7, 2017 11:44
@pepper_chico How would a derived class of Derived strictly add functionality to foo() without calling Derived::prelude() or Derived::foo_impl()?
Feb 7, 2017 11:44
@pepper_chico What if a subclass of Derived needs to override prelude()? It will need to invoke Derived::prelude()- the exact thing I'm trying to avoid, just shifted down one level in the object heirarchy
Feb 7, 2017 11:44
@pepper_chico That is the template method I described. It works great, unless subclasses of the derived class are required to call the derived versions of the virtual functions. All we've done is shifted the burden of calling super one level.
Feb 7, 2017 11:44
@paulsm4 By all means, recommend a way to refactor the first code block to eliminate the code smell. I'm interested not only working code, but robust code. This is a general enough issue, I think having a good pattern to use in my toolbox is worth a little effort.
Feb 7, 2017 11:44
@MK. It is a code smell. It's not necessarily a problem, but may indicate a flawed design. The problem with the design is that it is easily broken. Anyone writing a subclass would need to somehow know to call the base class function.