68

What is the significance of the two keywords Shadows and Overrides? What they do and for which context is one or the other preferable?

3
  • 1
    You could consider accepting @Nick's answer, as it's much more useful. (Besides, it's kinda confusing to have a greyed-out answer on top...)
    – Cullub
    Jul 31, 2017 at 16:28
  • I don't think so. The accepted answer, explains what they do and why shadowing isn't exactly preferable. Aug 14, 2017 at 12:49
  • The documentation says: "The main purpose of shadowing (which is also known as hiding by name) is to preserve the definition of your class members. The base class might undergo a change that creates an element with the same name as one you have already defined. If this happens, the Shadows modifier forces references through your class to be resolved to the member you defined, instead of to the new base class element."
    – Ama
    Apr 2, 2021 at 16:42

17 Answers 17

90

Overrides is the more normal qualifier. If the child class redefines a base class function in this way, then regardless of how a child object is referenced (using either a base class or a child class reference) it is the child function that is called.

On the other hand, if the child class function Shadows the base class function, then a child object accessed via a base class reference will use that base class function, despite being a child object.
The child function definition is only used if the child object is accessed using a matching child reference.

3
21

Shadowing probably doesn't do what you think it does.

Consider the following classes:

Public MustInherit Class A 
    Public Function fX() As Integer
        Return 0
    End Function
End Class

Public Class B
    Inherits A 
    Public Shadows Function fX() As Integer
        Return 1
    End Function 
End Class

Now I use them:

Dim oA As A
Dim oB As New B
oA = oB

You probably think oA and oB are the same right?

Nope.

oA.fx = 0 while oB.fx = 1

Imho this is very dangerous behavior and it's barely mentioned in the docs.

If you had used override they would be the same.

So while there are legitimate uses for shadows, chances are whatever you're doing is not one of them and it should be avoided.

1
  • Nice illustration of where you can run into problems with this functionality. Note this effect also occurs if you iterate through a collection of the base class with instances of the inherited class in the collection. Nov 8, 2012 at 15:09
15

Overrides - Extending or creating alternate functionality for a method.

Example: Add or extended the functionality of the Paint event of a window.


    Protected Overrides Sub OnPaint(ByVal e As System.Windows.Forms.PaintEventArgs)
        MyBase.OnPaint(e) ' retain the base class functionality
        'add code for extended functionality here
    End Sub

Shadows - Redefines an inherited method and forces its use for all classes instanced with that type. In other words the method is not overloaded but redefined and the base class methods are not available, thus forcing the use of the function declared in the class. Shadows preserves or retains the definition of the method such that it is not destroyed if the base class methods are modified.

Example: Force all "B" classes to use it's oddball Add definition such that if A class Add methods are modified it won't affect B's add. (Hides all base class "Add" methods. Won't be able to call A.Add(x, y, z) from an instance of B.)


    Public Class A
        Public Function Add(ByVal x As Integer, ByVal y As Integer) As Integer
            Return x + y
        End Function
        Public Function Add(ByVal x As Integer, ByVal y As Integer, ByVal z As Integer) As Integer
            Return x + y + z
        End Function
    End Class
    Public Class B
        Inherits A
        Public Shadows Function Add(ByVal x As Integer, ByVal y As Integer) As Integer
            Return x - y
        End Function
    End Class
4
  • 1
    This goes against several OO principles, therefore I'd like to head a practical use case (the above isn't). This is what I mean by “novice”: it's basically an unnecessary mechanism that produces a bad, un-pluggable interface. The very antithesis of good OO design. Jan 20, 2009 at 22:54
  • 1
    In particular, your code won't work with polymorphic instances of A: Dim x As A = new B() : x.Add(1, 2). Jan 20, 2009 at 22:57
  • 1
    I agree with Jim, Chad and Konrad. Shadows is anti-OO.
    – chyne
    Jan 21, 2009 at 15:52
  • 3
    Fortunately for you this thread is about what they do and what context they are used in.
    – user50612
    Jan 21, 2009 at 22:45
10

Sometime a small example really helps understand the difference in a technical way.

Sub Main()

    Dim o As New ChildClass

    Console.WriteLine(o.GetValOverride()) ' Prints 2
    Console.WriteLine(o.GetValShadow()) ' Prints 2
    Console.WriteLine(CType(o, ParentClass).GetValOverride()) ' Prints 2
    Console.WriteLine(CType(o, ParentClass).GetValShadow()) ' Prints 1
    Console.ReadLine()

End Sub

Class ParentClass

    Public Overridable Function GetValOverride() As String
        Return "1"
    End Function

    Public Function GetValShadow() As String
        Return "1"
    End Function

End Class

Class ChildClass
    Inherits ParentClass

    Public Overrides Function GetValOverride() As String
        Return "2"
    End Function

    Public Shadows Function GetValShadow() As String
        Return "2"
    End Function

End Class
7

The "shadows" keyword essentially says "If whoever is accessing this object knows it to be of this type or one of its descendents, use this member; otherwise use the base one." The simplest example of this might be a base class ThingFactory, which includes a "MakeNew" method which returns a Thing, and a class CarFactory, derived from ThingFactory, whose "MakeNew" method always returns a Thing that will be of derived type Car. If a routine knows that a ThingFactory it holds happens to, more particularly, be a CarFactory, then it will use a shadowed CarFactory.MakeNew (if one exists), which can specify the return type as Car. If a routine doesn't know that its ThingFactory is actually a CarFactory, it will use a non-shadowed MakeNew (which should call an internal protected overridable MakeDerivedThing method).

Incidentally, another good use of shadows is to prevent derived classes from accessing Protected methods which will no longer work. There's no way of simply hiding a member from derived classes other than assigning a new one, but one can prevent derived classes from doing anything with a protected member by declaring a new protected empty class with that name. For example, if calling MemberwiseClone on an object would break it, one can declare:

  Protected Shadows Class MemberwiseClone
  End Class
Note that this does not violate OOP principles like the Liskov Substitution Principle, since that only applies in cases where a derived class might be used in place of a base-class object. If Foo and Bar inherits from Boz, a method which accepts a Boz parameter may legitimately be passed in a Foo or Bar instead. On the other hand, an object of type Foo will know that its base-class object is of type Boz. It will never be anything else (e.g. it's guaranteed not to be a Bar).

7

An example of shadowing: Let's assume that you want to use a function in a third-party component, but the function is protected. You can bypass this constraint with simple inheritance and exposing a shadowed function which basically calls its base function:

Public Class Base

    Protected Sub Configure()
        ....
    End Sub

End Class

Public Class Inherited
    Inherits Base

    Public Shadows Sub Configure()
        MyBase.Configure()
    End Sub

End Class
4

I think there are really two scenarios that people are taking on here and both are legitimate. You could really break them down into the base class designer and the developer years later who is implementing the subclass who cannot modify the base class. So yes, the best thing to do is override if you have that luxury. This is the clean OOD approach.

On the other hand you may have something like example given above where you are on the other end of this equation having to implement a sub class and you cannot change the fact that the method you need to override is not marked overridable. Take for example

Public Shadows Function Focus() As Boolean
    txtSearch.Focus()
    Return MyBase.Focus()
End Function

In this case I'm inheriting my class from the Winform control class which unfortunately isn't marked as overridable. At this point I'm faced with just making the code "pure" or making it easier to understand. The client of this control simply wants to call control.Focus() and probably doesn't care. I could have named this method FocusSearchText() or Focus2, etc but I believe the above is much more simple for the client code. It's true that if the client then casts this control as the base class and calls Focus my code won't excute. But that is fairly remote.

In the end it comes down to a judgement call, and one you'll have to make.

3

This is a recent MSDN link: Differences between shadowing and overriding

Shadowing protects against a subsequent base-class modification that introduces a member you have already defined in your derived class. You normally use shadowing in the following cases:

** You anticipate that your base class might be modified to define an element using the same name as yours.*

** You want the freedom of changing the element type or calling sequence.*

(I'm yet to investigate usage with respect to scope and types)

3

Well here is the answer by Code.

Module Module1

    Sub Main()
        Dim object1 As Parent = New Child()
        Console.WriteLine("object1, reference type Parent and object type Child")
        object1.TryMe1()
        object1.TryMe2()
        object1.TryMe3()

        Console.WriteLine("")
        Console.WriteLine("")
        Console.WriteLine("object2, reference type Child and object type Child")
        Dim object2 As Child = New Child()

        object2.TryMe1()
        object2.TryMe2()
        object2.TryMe3()

        Console.ReadLine()
    End Sub

End Module

Public Class Parent

    Public Sub TryMe1()
        Console.WriteLine("Testing Shadow: Parent.WriteMe1")
    End Sub

    Public Overridable Sub TryMe2()
        Console.WriteLine("Testing override: Parent.WriteMe2")
    End Sub

    Public Sub TryMe3()
        Console.WriteLine("Testing Shadow without explicitly writing shadow modifier: Parent.WriteMe3")
    End Sub
End Class

Public Class Child
    Inherits Parent

    Public Shadows Sub TryMe1()
        Console.WriteLine("Testing Shadow: Child.WriteMe1")
    End Sub

    Public Overrides Sub TryMe2()
        Console.WriteLine("Testing override: Child.WriteMe2")
    End Sub

    Public Sub TryMe3()
    Console.WriteLine("Testing Shadow without explicitly writing shadow modifier: Child.WriteMe3")
    End Sub
End Class


'Output:
'object1, reference type Parent and object type Child
'Testing Shadow: Parent.WriteMe1
'Testing override: Child.WriteMe2
'Testing Shadow without explicitly writing shadow modifier: Parent.WriteMe3


'object2, reference type Child and object type Child
'Testing Shadow: Child.WriteMe1
'Testing override: Child.WriteMe2
'Testing Shadow without explicitly writing shadow modifier: Child.WriteMe3

You can copy paste this and try it yourself. As you can see the shadowing is the default behavior, and Visual Studio does warn you when shadowing is going on without you explicitly writing the shadow modifier.

Note: For me, I have never used a Base class reference to a child object. For such cases I always use Interfaces.

0
2

Shadow allows you to do certain things that cannot be done with overrides.

In my own case: I have several tables classes with generic functionality; but for whom the collections themselves are of different types.

Public Class GenericTable
Protected Friend Overridable Property Contents As System.Collections.Generic.List(Of GenericItem)
    ... do stuff ...
End Class

Then I have specific isntances:

Public Class WidgetTable
Inherits GenericTable
Protected Friend Shadows Property Contents As System.Collections.Generic.List(Of Widget)
    ... stuff is inhereted ...
End Class

I could not override because the the type is changed.

1
  • 2
    Because what you want is an overload on result type only. So you need to shadow all MyBase.Contents methods to "get rid of" the overload you can't use.
    – Mark Hurd
    Oct 5, 2012 at 0:37
2

I found another difference. See this:

Sub Main()
    Dim X As New Derived
    Dim Y As Base = New Derived
    Console.WriteLine("X:" & X.Test())
    Console.WriteLine("Y:" & Y.Test())
    Console.WriteLine("X:" & CType(X, Base).Test)
    Console.WriteLine("X:" & X.Func())
    Console.WriteLine("Y:" & Y.Func())
    Console.WriteLine("X:" & CType(X, Base).Func)
    Console.ReadKey()
End Sub
Public Class Base
    Public Overridable Function Func() As String
        Return "Standard"
    End Function
    Function Test() As String
        Return Me.Func()
    End Function
End Class
Public Class Derived
    Inherits Base
    Public $$$ Function Func() As String
        Return "Passed By Class1" & " - " & MyBase.Func
    End Function
End Class

If you are using Overrides (where there is $$$) THERE IS NO WAY to use Func on Base class either if the definition of the instance is Derived, and if the definition is base but the instance is of the Derived type.

If you are using Shadows, the only way you can see the Func into the derived class, is to define the instance as Derived, and without passing to a method of base class (X.Test returns Standard). I think this is the main one: If I use Shadows, the method won't overload the base method inside base methods.

This is the OOP approach of Overloads. If I derive a class and IN NO CASE I want that a method would be called, I have to use Overloads. For instances of my objects, there is no way to return "Standard" (Except using reflections, I think). I think intellisense make a bit of confusion. If I highlight Y.Func, there will be highlighted the Func into base class, but is executed the Func into derived class.

With Shadows, the new method is reachable only directly. As such as Overloads, but hiding the overloads of the base class (I think it's an error returned before the compilation, because you can call it using a cast, as such as implicit done using a overload).

2

Shadows can be very useful if you are writing a wrapper around an existing control.

For instance around a combobox. By shadowing the AutoCompleteSource you can prevent it to be set to a illegitimate value for your special kind of combobox even when it's cast to a normal combobox. Or do some pre-proccessing before you use mybase.AutoCompleteSource = value in the shadowing property.

2

VB use more advanced OOP concepts than C#, for use overriding in derived class in C# you MUST mark method as "vitrual", Shadow allow you make overload without this.

Read MS documentation about this https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/visual-basic/programming-guide/language-features/declared-elements/differences-between-shadowing-and-overriding

1

The use of Shadows is rare but true. Moreover you cannot override a shared (static) method. So you must shadow a shared method if you want to "override" it.

0

I agree with Jim. I've never found a legitimate use for Shadows, either. Usually if I see it, I assume that sub-section of the code needs to be refactored a bit.

I suppose it is there so that you can shadow a method from an assembly in which you do not have control over the source code. In that case, refactoring the parent class would be impossible.

2
  • -1. If shadows is being used correctly there should be no need for refactoring.
    – user50612
    Jan 20, 2009 at 22:47
  • I would question an OO design which relies a lot on the use of shadowing methods. If a derived class really "is-a" more specific type of a base class, it should usually only be extending functionality and not removing functionality. Jan 21, 2009 at 4:19
0

I wanted to use System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Response instead of Response.redirect, and needed the convenience to code as Response.redirect. I defined a readonly property named Response to shadow the original in a base class. I couldn't use overrides, since this property is not overridable. Very convenient:)

-14

I wouldn't consider Shadows to really be an OOP concept. Overrides indicates that you are providing new or additional functionality for a method/property etc that was declared in an ancestor class. Shadows really tricks the compiler into thinking that the parent method/property etc does not even exist.

I have no use for Shadows. Stick to Overrides. These types of helpful little "features" that VB has provided for years always end up causing you grief at some point.

9
  • 28
    -1. Shadows is a distinct and useful concept. It hides all base class methods with the same name and forces the use of the declared method. Overrides does not hide all base class methods.
    – user50612
    Jan 20, 2009 at 22:44
  • 4
    As soon as you shadow an inherited method, the class can no longer be considered a true descendant of it's ancestor. IMHO this is not truly OOP and I question the application design that would lead down this path. In some cases it maybe is necessary, but typically not.
    – Jim Petkus
    Jan 21, 2009 at 1:51
  • 25
    -1 The C# equivalent is 'new' so private new string Test() {...} does the same thing. Not just a vb.net 'problem'
    – Pondidum
    Sep 24, 2009 at 14:54
  • 7
    You deserve -2, first for disrespecting the very useful Shadows word then for not knowing the basic keywords of the language you're so proud of, 'insulting' other languages Nov 16, 2009 at 22:22
  • 4
    I'm not sure whether to downvote this answer because all the corrections from other downvoters are so useful I wouldn't want the answerer to mark the answer deleted. Nov 8, 2012 at 14:58

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