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Home/ Questions/Q 4060934
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T15:24:08+00:00 2026-05-20T15:24:08+00:00

I have these classes: class Base { public: virtual void foo(int x = 0)

  • 0

I have these classes:

class Base
{
    public:
        virtual void foo(int x = 0)
        {
            printf("X = %d", x);
        }
};

class Derived : public Base
{
    public:
        virtual void foo(int x = 1)
        {
            printf("X = %d", x);
        }
};

When I have:

Base* bar = new Derived();
bar->foo();

My output is “X = 0”, even if foo is called from Derived, but when I have:

Derived* bar = new Derived();
bar->foo();

My output is “X = 1”. Is this behavior correct? (To select default parameter value from the declaration type, instead of selecting it from actual object type). Does this break C++ polymorphism?

It can cause many problems if somebody uses virtual functions without specifying the actual function parameter and uses the function’s default parameter.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T15:24:09+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 3:24 pm

    Default arguments are retained even if you override a function! And this behaviour is correct. Let me search the reference from the C++ Standard.

    §8.3.6/10 [Default arguments] from the C++ Standard says,

    A virtual function call (10.3) uses
    the default arguments in the
    declaration of the virtual function
    determined by the static type of the
    pointer or reference denoting the
    object
    . An overriding function in a
    derived class does not acquire default
    arguments from the function it
    overrides
    .

    The example from the Standard itself

    struct A {
         virtual void f(int a = 7);
    };
    struct B : public A {
         void f(int a);
    };
    void m()
    {
        B* pb = new B;
        A* pa = pb;
        pa->f(); //OK, calls pa->B::f(7)
        pb->f(); //error: wrong number of arguments for B::f()
    }
    

    Also, not only it’s retained, it is evaluated everytime the function is called:

    §8.3.6/9 says,

    Default arguments are evaluated each
    time the function is called

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