In order to answer this question fully, one needs to understand that the property of being virtual
applies independently to the function itself and to the calls made to that function. There are virtual and non-virtual functions. There are virtual and non-virtual calls to these functions.
The same is true about the property of being inline
. There are iniline and non-inline functions. And there are inlined and non-inlined calls to these functions.
These properties - virtual
and inline
- when applied to the function itself, do not conflict. They simply have no reason and no chance to conflict. The only thing that inline
specifier changes for the function itself is that it modifies the One Definition Rule for that function: the function can be defined in multiple translation units (and it has to be defined in every translation unit where it is used). The only thing virtual
specifier changes is that the class containing that function becomes polymorphic. It has no real effect on the function itself.
So, there's absolutely no problem in declaring a function virtual
and inline
at the same time. There's no basis for the conflict whatsoever. It is perfectly legal in C++ language.
struct S {
virtual void foo();
};
inline void S::foo() // virtual inline function - OK, whatever
{
}
However, when people are asking this question, they are usually not interested in the properties of the function itself, but rather in characteristics of the calls made to the function.
The defining feature of a virtual call is that it is resolved at run time, meaning that it is generally impossible to inline true virtual calls:
S *s = new SomeType;
s->foo(); // virtual call, in general case cannot be inlined
However, if a call is by itself non-virtual (even though it goes to a virtual function), inlining is not a problem at all:
S *s = new SomeType;
s->S::foo(); // non-virtual call to a virtual function, can easily be inlined
Of course, in some cases an optimizing compiler might be able to figure out the target of a virtual call at compile time and inline even such virtual call. In some cases it is easy:
S ss;
ss.foo(); // formally a virtual call, but in practice it can easily be inlined
In some cases it is more complicated, but still doable:
S *s = new S;
s->foo(); // virtual call, but a clever compiler might be able
// to figure out that it can be inlined