I have defined an interface class A
which defines some basic functions. In my implementation I have a base class A0
which implements this interface and from this base class I have derived several other classes in a hierarchy.
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
class IContainer
{
public:
IContainer() {};
virtual ~IContainer() {};
virtual void loadDefaults() = 0;
virtual void storeDefaults() = 0;
virtual bool open() = 0;
virtual bool close() = 0;
};
class IContainerReader
{
public:
IContainerReader() {};
virtual ~IContainerReader() {};
virtual bool read() = 0;
};
class IContainerWriter
{
public:
IContainerWriter() {};
virtual ~IContainerWriter() {};
virtual bool write() = 0;
};
class ContainerBase : public IContainer
{
public:
ContainerBase() {}
virtual ~ContainerBase() {}
void loadDefaults() {}
void storeDefaults() {}
};
class CSVBase : public ContainerBase
{
public:
CSVBase() {}
virtual ~CSVBase() {}
void setFilename() {}
bool open() { return true; }
bool close() { return true; }
};
class CSVReader : public CSVBase, public IContainerReader
{
public:
CSVReader() {}
virtual ~CSVReader() {}
bool read() { return true; }
};
class CSVWriter : public CSVBase, public IContainerWriter
{
public:
CSVWriter() {}
virtual ~CSVWriter() {}
bool write() { return true; }
};
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
CSVReader r;
CSVWriter w;
IContainerReader *ir = &r;
IContainerWriter *iw = &w;
ir->open();
iw->open();
ir->read();
iw->write();
ir->close();
iw->close();
return 0;
}
As you can see I defined a IContainerReader
and a IContainerWriter
class which defines special functions only relevant to the respective implementation.
But now I have a problem, because I want to be sure that a Reader or a writer always has the container base as well. So the logical solution would be to derive IContainerReader/-Writer
from IContainer
. But when I do this, thge compiler complains, because it expects that now a Reader/Writer
object implements again the base functions as well, which are already defined via the base class. But if I let IContainerReader
not derive from IContainer
a pointer to one of those objects is not guruanteed to have the IContainer
functionality as well.
If I try to compile it like this I get errors, because IContainerReader
is not a IContainer
||=== Build: Debug in CPPMingW (compiler: GNU GCC Compiler) ===|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp||In function 'int main(int, char**)':|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|83|error: 'class IContainerReader' has no member named 'open'|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|84|error: 'class IContainerWriter' has no member named 'open'|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|89|error: 'class IContainerReader' has no member named 'close'|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|90|error: 'class IContainerWriter' has no member named 'close'|
||=== Build failed: 4 error(s), 0 warning(s) (0 minute(s), 5 second(s)) ===|
However, if I derive IContainerReader
from IContainer
as it should be, I get the following errors:
||=== Build: Debug in CPPMingW (compiler: GNU GCC Compiler) ===|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp||In function 'int main(int, char**)':|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|78|error: cannot declare variable 'r' to be of abstract type 'CSVReader'|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|58|note: because the following virtual functions are pure within 'CSVReader':|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|11|note: virtual void IContainer::loadDefaults()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|12|note: virtual void IContainer::storeDefaults()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|14|note: virtual bool IContainer::open()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|15|note: virtual bool IContainer::close()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|79|error: cannot declare variable 'w' to be of abstract type 'CSVWriter'|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|67|note: because the following virtual functions are pure within 'CSVWriter':|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|11|note: virtual void IContainer::loadDefaults()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|12|note: virtual void IContainer::storeDefaults()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|14|note: virtual bool IContainer::open()|
D:\src\c\Tests\CPPMingW\main.cpp|15|note: virtual bool IContainer::close()|
||=== Build failed: 2 error(s), 0 warning(s) (0 minute(s), 6 second(s)) ===|
So the compiler expects me to reiplment all the functions from the base classes in the derived class as well.
So is there a solution to this, without having to define all these functions in the Reader/Writer class again? Of course I could implement dummies which just go down to the base class, but I consider this a bit clumsy and unneccessary overhead and I hope that there may be a better solution for this.