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Question About Polymorphism And Function Calls
Can a polymorphed class only call functions that exist/are derived from the base class if the object is a pointer to the base class? And if so, is there a possible work-around to call the derived functions? class A{ public: virtual void go() = 0; }; class B : public A{ public: void go() { //stuff } void stop() { //other stuff } }; int main() { A *a = new B; a->go(); a->stop(); //Doesn't know about 'stop' }
3 Réponses
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not that I am aware. Having a stop() in A is how I would go about this.
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You can always recast it to call derived functions. This will work:
https://code.sololearn.com/c3auwm2ywMkO/#cpp
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I would use a dynamic_cast <> in this case though, just in case. Then check that it's not a nullptr before using it.