I've got a handy collection in my middle tier which is for collections of child things that belong to a parent thing.
public class ChildCollection<TParent, TChild>
{
public IEnumerable<TChild> GetChildren();
etc.
}
In the interface, I've got a handy grid that can display the contents of a ChildCollection<TParent,TChild> and let users do work on it.
public abstract class ChildCollectionGrid<TCollection, TParent, TChild> : MyGridControl
where TCollection : ChildCollection<TParent, TChild>
{
public abstract TCollection Collection;
etc.
}
Inheriting this class to make a grid to work with the Waffles on a Widget ends up looking like this.
public class WidgetWafflesGrid : ChildCollectionGrid<WidgetWafflesCollection, Widget, Waffle>
This is a little redundant. A WidgetWaffleCollection is a ChildCollection<Widget,Waffle>. With that first generic type argument specified, the class won't compile unless you specify exactly those two others.
Is there a prettier way to accomplish this where the compiler could infer those other two types? I know I'm being finicky but ideally I would like to have the class declaration look like:
public class WidgetWafflesGrid : ChildCollectionGrid<WidgetWafflesCollection>
Thanks for your help!