I\'m having a bit of trouble figuring out this error I have. So I have a Person class, and a Student subclass.
The Person class has the following constructor:
You need to delegate to the correct ctor from the base class like this:
Student::Student(const string &name, int regNo)
: Person( name )
{
this->regNo = regNo;
}
Note that this uses initializer lists, so you could use the more idiomatic
Student::Student(const string &name, int regNo)
: Person( name ), regNo( regNo )
{
}
and for the Person
ctor:
Person(const string &name)
: name( name )
{
}
The initializer list is used to initialize base classes and the member variables, everything you don't explicitly put in there is default constructed (and in your code, it is later assigned in the ctor's body). Since Person
is not default constructible, you must initialize it in the initializer list.
You are attempting to call Person
's default constructor, but it doesn't have one. In any case, it looks like what you want to do is call its single parameter constructor:
Student::Student(const string& name, int regNo) : Person(name), regNo(regNo)
{
}
Similarly, use the constructor initialization list in Person
's consructor:
Person(const string& name) : name(name) {}
This way, you are initializing your data members to the desired value, instead of default initializing them and then assigning them new values.