ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG21 P0929R0
Jens Maurer <Jens.Maurer@gmx.net>
Target audience: EWG, CWG
2018-02-08

P0929R0: Checking for abstract class types

Introduction

Subclause 13.4 [class.abstract] paragraph 3 states:
An abstract class shall not be used as a parameter type, as a function return type, or as the type of an explicit conversion. Pointers and references to an abstract class can be declared.
This is troublesome, because it requires checking a property only known once a type is complete at a position (declaring a function) where the rest of the language permits incomplete types to appear.

In practice, this introduces spooky "backward-in-time" errors:

struct S;
S f();   // #1, ok

// lots of code

struct S { virtual void f() = 0; };  // makes #1 retroactively ill-formed

Discussion

Declarations should add information to the state of a program, not retroactively make existing constructs that have been parsed successfully ill-formed.

Beyond the ability to declare functions with incomplete return and parameter types, the standard also allows for the return type to be inspected using decltype(f()) even if it is incomplete. This ability might be used in template metaprogramming, and it should not break if one of the involved types happens to be abstract.

There are two approaches to solving this issue:

The first option seems bizarre in that token-by-token identical redeclarations may become ill-formed:
    struct S;
    S f();      // ok, abstract-ness not checked here
    struct S { virtual void f() = 0; };
    S f();      // error: S is abstract
  
Therefore, the proposed wording chooses the second option.

It is recommended to treat this as a Defect Report against earlier versions of C++.

The suggested feature test macro is __cpp_abstract_class_checking.

Wording changes

Change in 8.2.1 [basic.lval] paragraph 9:
Unless otherwise indicated (8.5.1.2 [expr.call] 10.1.7.2 [dcl.type.simple]), a prvalue shall always have complete type or the void type; if it has a class type, that class shall not be an abstract class (13.4 [class.abstract]).
Change in 8.5.1.2 [expr.call] paragraph 4:
... When a function is called, the parameters that have object type shall have completely-defined object type the type of a parameter shall not be an incomplete or abstract class type. [ Note: this still allows a parameter to be a pointer or reference to an incomplete class type. However, it prevents a passed-by-value parameter to have an incomplete class type. -- end note ] ...
Change in 11.3.5 [dcl.fct] paragraph 12:
Types shall not be defined in return or parameter types. The type of a parameter or the return type for a function definition shall not be an incomplete or abstract (possibly cv-qualified) class type in the context of the function definition unless the function is deleted (11.4.3).
Editorial note: I suggest to move the statement about function definitions to 11.4 [dcl.fct.def].)

Remove 13.4 [class.abstract] paragraph 3:

An abstract class shall not be used as a parameter type, as a function return type, or as the type of an explicit conversion. Pointers and references to an abstract class can be declared. [ Example:
    shape x;                            // error: object of abstract class
    shape* p;                           // OK
    shape f();                          // error
    void g(shape);                      // error
    shape& h(shape&);                   // OK
-- end example ]