I have a.h as shown below
class A
{
public:
void doSomething()=0;
};
Then i have b.h as shown below
#include \"a.h\"
class
A member function can only be declared abstract (= 0) if it is virtual. Add the virtual keyword to the function declaration in the base class (in class A).
Prior to C++11, it was also good practice to repeat virtual in the declaration of the derived class member function, although it's technically not necessary there (as the rule is "once virtual, always virtual").
C++11 introduced the override keyword which can should used when overriding a virtual member function, to make the code safe against future changes (i.e. if the base function changes signature, the derived code will fail to compile instead of silently becoming wrong). Whether to also include virtual when override is present is up to personal taste/project coding standards. I consider it unnecessary and omit it, but that's just my personal preference.