It's a bad idea because they aren't kept anywhere.
The default values that are used will be those defined in the static (compile-time) type. So if you were to change the default parameters in an override, but you called the function through a base class pointer or reference, the default values in the base would be used.
#include <iostream>
struct Base
{
virtual ~Base(){ }
virtual void foo(int a=0) { std::cout << "base: " << a << std::endl; }
};
struct Derived : public Base
{
virtual ~Derived() { }
virtual void foo(int a=1) { std::cout << "derived: " << a << std::endl; }
};
int main()
{
Base* derived = new Derived();
derived->foo(); // prints "derived: 0"
delete derived;
}
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