Virtual Inheritance: Error: no unique final overrider
The most-derived class has to provide an implementation of the virtual functions in the virtual base class - otherwise how would it provide that base class interface, given the intermediate classes (i.e. your der1
and der2
) provide two alternatives already - which one should it call? You have to disambiguate the situation (i.e. with der3::fun()
).
Sure you're not actually calling der3::fun()
as you're explicitly requesting base::fun()
, but that doesn't mean the rules don't apply, any more than thinking you could instantiate an abstract class if you don't try to call the pure-virtual functions.... The program is ill-formed until the code ties off these loose ends.
Using the scope resolution operator to specify that you want to call base::fun
doesn't make the error go away because the program would be ill-formed even with an empty main()
. You simply are not allowed to have a situation in which a virtual function has more than one final overrider in any derived class that exists in your program.
Informally, just because trying to call p->fun()
would be ambiguous, the program is ill-formed even if you don't do it.
Note: This is in contrast to the situation you have with overloaded functions, in which potential ambiguity is allowed---perhaps even unavoidable---as long as you avoid a call that actually would be ambiguous. Why are the rules different? Basically it is because even constructing an object of type der3
cannot be done in a sensible way---which version of fun
should the vtable point to?