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Home/ Questions/Q 1019655
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T11:02:53+00:00 2026-05-16T11:02:53+00:00

struct B1{ int d; void fb(){}; }; struct B2 : B1{ using B1::d; using

  • 0
struct B1{
  int d;
  void fb(){};
};

struct B2 : B1{
  using B1::d;
  using B1::fb;

  int d;               // why this gives error?
  void fb(){}          // and this does not?
};

int main(){}

Is it because, B1::fb() is treated as B1::fb(B1*) and B2::fb() treated as B2::fb(B2*)? That is, does the implicit parameter, help in distinguishing these?

$13.3.1/4-

For nonconversion functions introduced
by a using-declaration into a derived
class, the function is considered to
be a member of the derived class for
the purpose of defining the type of
the implicit object parameter.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T11:02:54+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 11:02 am

    The C++ standard (C++03 §7.3.3/12) explains:

    When a using-declaration brings names from a base class into a derived class scope, member functions in the derived class override and/or hide member functions with the same name and parameter types in a base class (rather than conflicting).

    In your example, B2::fb() hides the B1::fb() introduced by the using declaration.

    As for why it is ill-formed to have both using B1::d; and int d; in the definition of B2, the C++ standard (C++03 §7.3.3/10) explains:

    Since a using-declaration is a declaration, the restrictions on declarations of the same name in the same declarative region also apply to using-declarations.

    So, it is ill-formed for the same reason that the following is ill-formed: it results in two objects with the same name in a single declarative region:

    struct S { int d; int d; };
    
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