Consider the following standard CRTP example:
#include <iostream>  template<class Derived> struct Base {     void f() { static_cast<Derived *>(this)->f(); }     void g() { static_cast<Derived *>(this)->g(); } };  struct Foo : public Base<Foo> {     void f() { std::cout << 42 << std::endl; } };  int main() {     Foo foo;     foo.f(); // just OK     foo.g(); // this will stack overflow and segfault } If this was regular virtual inheritance I could have mark virtual f and g methods as pure like
struct Base {     virtual void f() = 0;     virtual void g() = 0; }; and get a compile time error about Foo being abstract. But CRTP offers no such protection. Can I implement it somehow? Runtime check is acceptable too. I thought about comparing this->f pointer with static_cast<Derived *>(this)->f, but didn't manage to make it work.
You can assert at compile time that the two pointers to member functions are different, e.g.:
template<class Derived> struct Base {     void g() {         static_assert(&Derived::g != &Base<Derived>::g,                       "Derived classes must implement g().");          static_cast<Derived *>(this)->g();      } }; If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
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