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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T23:17:51+00:00 2026-05-10T23:17:51+00:00

As a C# developer I’m used to running through constructors: class Test { public

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As a C# developer I’m used to running through constructors:

class Test {     public Test() {         DoSomething();     }      public Test(int count) : this() {         DoSomethingWithCount(count);     }      public Test(int count, string name) : this(count) {         DoSomethingWithName(name);     } } 

Is there a way to do this in C++?

I tried calling the Class name and using the ‘this’ keyword, but both fail.

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  1. 2026-05-10T23:17:51+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 11:17 pm

    C++11: Yes!

    C++11 and onwards has this same feature (called delegating constructors).

    The syntax is slightly different from C#:

    class Foo { public:    Foo(char x, int y) {}   Foo(int y) : Foo('a', y) {} }; 

    C++03: No

    Unfortunately, there’s no way to do this in C++03, but there are two ways of simulating this:

    1. You can combine two (or more) constructors via default parameters:

      class Foo { public:   Foo(char x, int y=0);  // combines two constructors (char) and (char, int)   // ... }; 
    2. Use an init method to share common code:

      class Foo { public:   Foo(char x);   Foo(char x, int y);   // ... private:   void init(char x, int y); };  Foo::Foo(char x) {   init(x, int(x) + 7);   // ... }  Foo::Foo(char x, int y) {   init(x, y);   // ... }  void Foo::init(char x, int y) {   // ... } 

    See the C++FAQ entry for reference.

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