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Comments on How to define an object with different subclasses in an if-statement?

Post

How to define an object with different subclasses in an if-statement?

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Note: I asked this question on TopAnswers a couple weeks ago, but didn't get any response, so I figured I'd ask it here.


I am currently learning C++. I have a parent class (Vehicle) and two subclasses (Car and Boat). I am wondering how to create an object that will either be Car or Boat, depending on what the user specifies.

Below is my best attempt. It compiles and runs, but doesn't do what I want. It is supposed to make *vh a Car or Boat, but *vh always remains a Vehicle.

#include <iostream>

using namespace std;

class Vehicle
{
	public:
		void print(void)
		{
			cout<<"this is a vehicle\n";
		}
};

class Car: public Vehicle
{
	public:
		void print(void)
		{
			cout<<"this is a car\n";
		}
};

class Boat: public Vehicle
{
	public:
		void print(void)
		{
			cout<<"this is a boat\n";
		}
};

int main()
{
	Vehicle *vh = new Vehicle();
	Car *cr = new Car();
	Boat *bt = new Boat();

	int x;
	cout<<"type 0 for car and 1 for boat: ";
	cin>>x;

	if(x==0)
	{
		cout<<"you chose car\n";
		vh = cr;
	}
	else if(x==1)
	{
		cout<<"you chose boat\n";
		vh = bt;
	}
	vh->print();
}
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2 comment threads

Suggestion: Operator Overloading (2 comments)
Completely unrelated, but aren't you leaking memory (1 comment)
Suggestion: Operator Overloading
ghost-in-the-zsh‭ wrote about 1 year ago

I'd suggest that you overload the << operator instead of having a print method. That way, you should be able to take your Car c; and write std::cout << c << std::endl;, and so on. This is what the std::string class does.

Trevor‭ wrote about 1 year ago

Thank you for the suggestion