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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T23:40:43+00:00 2026-05-10T23:40:43+00:00

I’m trying to create an overridden operator function using both const parameters, but I

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I’m trying to create an overridden operator function using both const parameters, but I can’t figure out how to do it. Here is a simple example:

class Number {     Number()     {         value = 1;     };      inline Number operator + (const Number& n)     {         Number result;          result.value = value + n.value;         return result;     }      int value; } 

What I am trying to do here is pass in two arguments into the addition function that are both const and return the result without changing anything in the class:

const Number a = Number(); const Number b = Number(); Number c = a + b; 

Is this possible and how would I go about doing this?

Thanks,

Dan

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  1. 2026-05-10T23:40:44+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 11:40 pm

    inline is understood in class declarations so you don’t need to specify it.

    Most idiomatically, you would make operator+ a non-member function declared outside the class definition, like this:

    Number operator+( const Number& left, const Number& right ); 

    You might need to make it a friend of the class if it needs access to Number‘s internals.

    If you have to have it as a member function then you need to make the function itself const:

    Number operator+( const Number& n ) const { // ... 

    For classes like Number, operator+ is typically implemented in terms of operator+= as usually you want all the usual operators to work as expected and operator+= is typically easier to implement and operator+ tends not to lose any efficiency over implementing it separately.

    Inside the class:

    Number& operator+=( const Number& n ); 

    Outside the class:

    Number operator+( const Number& left, const Number& right ) {     return Number( left ) += right; } 

    or even:

    Number operator+( Number left, const Number& right ) {     return left += right; } 
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