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Home/ Questions/Q 153761
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T09:51:30+00:00 2026-05-11T09:51:30+00:00

I found the following code in a library: class Bar { public: bool foo(int

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I found the following code in a library:

class Bar { public:   bool foo(int i) {    return foo_(i);   } private:   virtual bool foo_(int i) = 0; }; 

Now I’m wondering: Why would you use this indirection? Could there be any reasons why the above would be better than the simple alternative:

class Bar { public:   virtual bool foo(int i) = 0; }; 
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  1. 2026-05-11T09:51:31+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 9:51 am

    This is the Non-Virtual Interface Idiom (NVI). That page by Herb Sutter has a good bit of detail about it. However, temper what you read there with what the C++ FAQ Lite says here and here.

    The primary advantage of NVI is separating interface from implementation. A base class can implement a generic algorithm and present it to the world while its subclasses can implement the details of the algorithm through virtual functions. Outside users are shielded from changes in the algorithm details, especially if you later decide you want to do add pre- and post-processing code.

    The obvious disadvantage is that you have to write extra code. Also, private virtual functions are confusing to a lot of people. Many coders mistakenly think you can’t override them. Herb Sutter seems to like private virtuals, but IMHO it’s more effective in practice to follow the C++ FAQ Lite’s recommendation and make them protected.

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