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Home/ Questions/Q 7638803
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T08:15:45+00:00 2026-05-31T08:15:45+00:00

I have a class hierarchy that can be simply put like this: struct Parent

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I have a class hierarchy that can be simply put like this:

struct Parent {
    Parent() { }
    Parent(Parent& p, std::string s) { }

private:
    // I want this class to be non-copyable
    Parent(const Parent&);
};

struct Child : public Parent {
    Child() { }
    Child(Parent& p) : Parent(p, "hi") { }
};

When I try to create two instances like this:

Child c1;
Child c2(c1);

I get the following error from Clang:

test.cpp:37:8: error: call to deleted constructor of 'Child'
        Child c2(c1);
              ^  ~~
test.cpp:30:8: note: function has been explicitly marked deleted here
struct Child : public Parent {
       ^
1 error generated.

I want this class to be non-copyable, so is there a way to have the Parent& overload called instead of the copy constructor? I know why it behaves the way it does but I am looking for a workaround. I would like Child(Parent& p) to be called without having to cast it.

I get this error in GCC and Visual Studio as well. I don’t get it with Intel’s compiler though, but the consistent behaviour of the other three seem to indicate that it’s wrong and the others are right.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T08:15:47+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 8:15 am

    You’re relying on the auto-generated copy constructor of the Child while making the copy constructor of the parent inaccessible. What seems to be happening is that the auto-generated copy constructor for Child is trying to call the copy constructor for the parent, but it can’t because it’s private.

    If you don’t want to add in a copy constructor, it looks like you need to either explicitly cast c1 to parent reference:

    Child c2(static_cast<Parent&>(c1));
    

    or declare copy constructor for Child.

    Apart from that, I don’t believe there is a workaround.

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