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A class can be derived from one or more interfaces.

If more than one interface has a method with the same signature, then the class has to implement such members of the interface explicitly.

So far in my experience I never encountered a situation where in which I had to derive from interfaces which have a method with the same signature.

Is there any examples of explicit interface implementation in .NET framework or in any publicly available libraries?

2 Answers 2

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Dictionary<Key, Value> explicitly implements ICollection<KeyValuePair<Key,Value>>. It is also common for classes which implement generic interfaces such as IEnumerable<T> to explicitly implement the non-generic counterpart.

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I think the most common case is IEnumerable and IEnumerable<T>.

Both declares the method GetEnumerator().

This is why when implementing IEnumerable<T> you have always 2 GetEnumerator() method to implement (IEnumerable<T> inherits from IEnumerable):

public IEnumerator<T> GetEnumerator()  // From IEnumerable<T> interface
{
    // Code
}

IEnumerator IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()  // From IEnumerable interface
{
    // Code
}

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