Thx a lot For your work hard on The Video. I am Old enough for become beginner in C++, but because you are good teacher ... I have a lot of courage to work on it .....
Please publish some lectures on advanced exception handling: rethrowing exceptions, stack unwinding, exceptions and destructors, and some possible bugs that may happen.
Yess dude, trying to push as fast as possible. As this is my part-time sometimes it hard even to think about it. But will definitely push these topics, they are really interesting topics.
great explanation!!!!! Thank you so much!!! one thing that makes me love your video so much is that your video always includes very sufficient information about one subject and inspires me to explore more about it.
Hello Rupesh, thank you for the video! I'd like to see from you some video on the topic where you will be discussing C++ books out there from the standpoint of your own experience and providing some details on what was beneficial for you from that book, what was not that good, etc..
You can override function from both derived and base class. It's just that if you want to override base then you will inherit base and override or if you want to override derived then you inherit derived class in your class and then override meaning whatever you inherit you can override.
Let's suppose you want to add two variables so if they are int, float, double, sort then it is fine you can use one function temple and it will work, but if data type is char then you don't want to add you want to append them then you need explicit function in case of char. Now you can overload that function with explicit char data type. So we need both.
One reason i could say is, it would be very much confusing and compiler will have to do hell lot of work to actually verify that it is binding to the right function. And another thing is i really fail to see any benefits of that. So may be its of no use so this feature is not provided.
15:36- that's not true what You are saying here. Actually using these two keywords (override and virtual) in same method will give You a warning while compiling saying there is no point in marking an overridding method virtual as all methods that override are automatically virtual (as You mentioned in the beginning, but somehow forgot about the fact) :)
Thanks for the videos... Can you tell, How that object calling works, like c3 = c1 + c2.. c1 contain 1,3 and c2 contain 2, 5, then c3 = c1 + c2.. when object c1 called how c2 takes as reference, please make it clear once..
Extremely thorough, covering all nuances. Thank you!
Thanks for the videos! I’m a college student getting ready for interviews your videos really help me refresh!! :)
You are most welcome Gaga Antic!!
I didn't know that problem with the hidden overloaded virtual function. I will definitely return to this video one more time and take notes.
Thx a lot For your work hard on The Video. I am Old enough for become beginner in C++, but because you are good teacher ... I have a lot of courage to work on it .....
Glad to help..
Could you please share the video links for below topics?
->Interface
->virtual table and virtual pointer
->Abstract class
->Virtual Function
Sure...
@@CppNuts link?
Please publish some lectures on advanced exception handling: rethrowing exceptions, stack unwinding, exceptions and destructors, and some possible bugs that may happen.
Yess dude, trying to push as fast as possible.
As this is my part-time sometimes it hard even to think about it. But will definitely push these topics, they are really interesting topics.
great explanation!!!!! Thank you so much!!! one thing that makes me love your video so much is that your video always includes very sufficient information about one subject and inspires me to explore more about it.
Thanks..
yah
please make video on overload new and delete operator
Sure man!!
Coming in 2-3 days.
What is the use of override in derived class its behaviour same with this word and vice versa
Hello Rupesh, thank you for the video!
I'd like to see from you some video on the topic where you will be discussing C++ books out there from the standpoint of your own experience and providing some details on what was beneficial for you from that book, what was not that good, etc..
Noted.. thanks man..
hi,plz i would like u explain construtors and destructors in the simple inhetance
Which IDE is this?
Because in our college they still use Borland's Turbo C++ 3.0
Its sublime test editor, but you will have to attach compiler with it.
please from next video make the font size a little bigger🙏🙏
Ok i will try.. thanks..
Could you please make video of vtable and vptr
So if i understand correctly, you can only override functions in the derived class and not the base class?
You can override function from both derived and base class.
It's just that if you want to override base then you will inherit base and override or if you want to override derived then you inherit derived class in your class and then override meaning whatever you inherit you can override.
Very Good Sir
Thanks and welcome
hi @CppNuts,
We can use double pointers in polymorphism?
what do you mean by using double pointer in polymorphism?
@@CppNuts yes
How we can use double pointer in Polymorphism?
is It possible or not?
@@harshalshirole2157 i have written a program for your question please check.
coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/2fe896c349a04e6b
@@CppNuts Yeah got it Thank You
please share virtual table and vptr concept
Sure, wait for some time.
Why function overloading when we can use template classes?
Let's suppose you want to add two variables so if they are int, float, double, sort then it is fine you can use one function temple and it will work, but if data type is char then you don't want to add you want to append them then you need explicit function in case of char. Now you can overload that function with explicit char data type.
So we need both.
Hello Sir I have one doubt why function overloading cannot distinguished with there return type any specific reason .
One reason i could say is, it would be very much confusing and compiler will have to do hell lot of work to actually verify that it is binding to the right function. And another thing is i really fail to see any benefits of that. So may be its of no use so this feature is not provided.
@@CppNuts thanks
You are welcome!!
please tell me how runtime polymorphism actually applied?
Thanks a lot.
Thanks man.
15:36- that's not true what You are saying here. Actually using these two keywords (override and virtual) in same method will give You a warning while compiling saying there is no point in marking an overridding method virtual as all methods that override are automatically virtual (as You mentioned in the beginning, but somehow forgot about the fact) :)
Thanks for the videos...
Can you tell, How that object calling works, like c3 = c1 + c2.. c1 contain 1,3 and c2 contain 2, 5, then c3 = c1 + c2.. when object c1 called how c2 takes as reference, please make it clear once..
This is full playlist on operator overloading.
ruclips.net/video/DVMZPOt816E/видео.html
Can you explain how virtual functions are implemented internally?
Sure..
you did not made it clear about overriding with different parameters
the runtime polymorphism examples are poorly chosen.