The Q&A at Why do we need virtual functions in C++? is a dilemma.
The author seems to understand virtual member functions to some extent, and their confusion is mainly caused by
But earlier in the book, when learning about basic inheritance, I was able to override base functions in derived classes without using virtual.
The original title of the question was "Can someone explain C++ Virtual Methods?", which is not a great title, and revision 3 changed it to "Why do we need virtual functions in C++?"
This new title doesn't match the intent of the author, but it went unnoticed and was never rolled back. A more accurate title which addresses this issue would be "Why can I omit the virtual keyword on member functions in derived classes?". The Q&A is filled with
- good answers like https://stackoverflow.com/a/2392656/5740428 which answer the wrong question and ignore the author's problem, and with
- lower quality answers like https://stackoverflow.com/a/51431061/5740428 which correctly address the quoted problem.
Possible Solutions
- Reword the question text and replace it with something that makes the Q&A as a whole make sense, i.e. make the question match the answers. Such an edit obviously conflicts with the intent of the author and amounts to vandalization.
- Ask a moderator to delete or relocate the answers, but such drastic changes would vandalize the Q&A as a whole. Chances are, many links to it exist already from external sources.
- Do nothing, leaving the Q&A in a nonsensical state where most answers don't address the question that the author intended to ask.
I'm genuinely puzzled because doing anything and doing nothing seem like bad options. My intuition is to throw the author under the bus so that the Q&A can be improved, and maybe a site moderator should make that edit, not me.
virtual
isn't needed in that context, and the answer doesn't address that problem. It indirectly shows an example ofvirtual
and non-virtual
member functions being overrides, but it's still unclear why that actually works.virtual
keyword, that seems to be the most significant (possibly the only) aspect to the question.virtual
when inheritance works without it?" (paraphrased), and there's plenty of answers (including the accepted answer) that explain whyvirtual
is sometimes necessary...virtual
keyword. This is certainly helpful to beginners from a prescriptive sense... but it also completely avoids discussing why dynamic polymorphism behaves like that in C++ in the first place. In contrast, such dynamic behavior is the default in e.g., Python.