PRB: Cause of the R6025 Run-Time Error
ID: Q125749
|
The information in this article applies to:
-
Microsoft Visual C++ for Windows, 16-bit edition, versions 1.0, 1.5, 1.51, 1.52
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Microsoft Visual C++, 32-bit Editions, versions 1.0, 2.0, 2.1, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0
SYMPTOMS
The C++ program fails, and reports the following run-time error:
runtime error R6025
- pure virtual function call
CAUSE
This error occurs when your application indirectly calls a pure virtual
member function in a context where a call to the function is not valid. In
most cases, the compiler detects this and reports the error when building
the application. But depending on how your code is written, sometimes the
problem is detected only at run-time.
The error occurs when you indirectly call a pure virtual function within
the context of a call to the constructor or destructor of an abstract base
class. This is illustrated in the sample code below, along with some more
description.
RESOLUTION
Calling a pure virtual function is a programming error, so you need to find
the call to the pure virtual function and rewrite the code so it is not
called.
One way to find a call to a pure virtual function is to replace the pure
virtual function with an implementation that calls the Windows API function
DebugBreak(). When using the debugger, DebugBreak() will cause a hard-coded
breakpoint. When the code stops running at this breakpoint, you can view
the callstack to see where the function was called.
STATUS
This behavior is by design.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, refer to the "C Run-Time Errors R6002 through R6025"
chapter of the "Build Errors" book included with Visual C++ 32-bit Edition,
version 4.0, Books Online or search the Books Online for "R6025."
NOTE: The R6025 error is not documented in the manuals or online help
included with Visual C++, versions 2.x or below. However, it is briefly
discussed in Part 3 of the README.WRI file shipped with Visual C++ version
2.0.
Sample Code
/* Compile options needed: none
*/
class A;
void fcn( A* );
class A
{
public:
virtual void f() = 0;
A() { fcn( this ); }
};
class B : A
{
void f() { }
};
void fcn( A* p )
{
p->f();
}
// The declaration below invokes class B's constructor, which
// first calls class A's constructor, which calls fcn. Then
// fcn calls A::f, which is a pure virtual function, and
// this causes the run-time error. B has not been constructed
// at this point, so the B::f cannot be called. You would not
// want it to be called because it could depend on something
// in B that has not been initialized yet.
B b;
void main()
{
}
Additional query words:
8.00 8.00c 9.00
Keywords : kberrmsg kbCompiler kbCPPonly kbVC kbVC100 kbVC150 kbVC151 kbVC152 kbVC200 kbVC210 kbVC400 kbVC500 kbVC600
Version : 1.0 1.5 1.51 1.52 2.0 2.1 4.0 5.
Platform : NT WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb