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Home/ Questions/Q 6646211
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T00:23:19+00:00 2026-05-26T00:23:19+00:00

I’ve got a base class and then several derived classes. I would like to

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I’ve got a base class and then several derived classes. I would like to overload the “<<” operator for these derived classes. For normal operators, i.e. ‘+’, virtual functions do the trick. What I understand to be the standard convention is to declare

friend ostream& operator<<(ostream& out, MyClass& A);

within my class and then define the function after the class. A priori I would think adding virtual to the above definition would make it work, but after some thought (and errors from my compiler) I realize that doesn’t make much sense.

I tried a different tack on a test case, where all the class members are public. For example:

class Foo{
 //bla
};

ostream& operator<<(ostream& out, Foo& foo){
  cout << "Foo" << endl;
  return foo;
}

class Bar : public Foo{
 //bla
};

ostream& operator<<(ostream& out, Bar& bar){
  cout << "Bar" << endl;
  return bar;
}

///////////////////////

Bar bar = Bar();
cout << bar << endl; // outputs 'Foo', not 'Bar' 

So in some way this is “polymorphism gone bad” — the base class operator<< is being called rather than the derived class operator. In the above example, how do I make the correct operator get called for the derived class? And more generally, if my class has private members I want to protect, how can I correct the operator overloading while using the friend keyword?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T00:23:19+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 12:23 am

    You can use a virtual helper function. Here’s a completely untested example, so excuse any syntax mistakes:

    virtual ostream& Foo::print(ostream& out) const {
        return out << "Foo";
    }
    
    virtual ostream& Bar::print(ostream& out) const {
        return out << "Bar";
    }
    
    // If print is public, this doesn't need to be a friend.
    ostream& operator<<(ostream& out, const Foo& foo) {
        return foo.print(out);
    }
    

    Edit: Cleaned up per @Omnifarious suggestions.

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